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In 1950, Alan Turing proposed a simple test designed to determine if computers can think. Its standard interpretation is as follows: a person (judge) simultaneously interacts with another person and with a computer. All test participants cannot see each other. Based on the answers given by the computer and the person, the judge must determine who he is talking to at the moment. If a computer program manages to mislead a person, it is believed that it passed the test for intelligence.
The Turing test created the prerequisites for the beginning of the rapid development of “smart” machines. In recent years, we are increasingly confronted with the facts that artificial intelligence systems are becoming more advanced.