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- Eliza - Wikipedia
Look up Eliza in Wiktionary, the free dictionary
- Why a 1960s Chatbot Left Its Creator Deeply Unsettled - HISTORY
ELIZA is widely recognized as the world’s first chatbot, and a version of it is still available online today
- Eliza (elizabot. js) - mass:werk
ELIZA is a natural language conversation program described by Joseph Weizenbaum in January 1966 [1] It features the dialog between a human user and a computer program representing a mock Rogerian psychotherapist
- ELIZA: a very basic Rogerian psychotherapist chatbot
ELIZA was one of the first chatterbots (later clipped to chatbot) It was also an early test case for the Turing Test, a test of a machine's ability to exhibit intelligent behavior equivalent to, or indistinguishable from, that of a human
- ELIZA, the worlds 1st chatbot, was just resurrected from 60-year-old . . .
Scientists have just resurrected "ELIZA," the world's first chatbot, from long-lost computer code — and it still works extremely well Using dusty printouts from MIT archives, these "software
- Meet ELIZA: The 1960s Chatbot That Started It All - Thomasnet
ELIZA offered a glimpse into what human-computer interactions could be like The chatbot was created by MIT scientist Joseph Weizenbaum in 1966 and named after the fictional character Eliza Doolittle from George Bernard Shaw’s 1913 play Pygmalion
- ELIZA: The First Step in Human-Computer Interaction Through Natural . . .
ELIZA is a computer program developed in 1966 by Joseph Weizenbaum that simulates conversation using pattern matching and substitution methodology It was designed to mimic a Rogerian psychotherapist by rephrasing users’ input as questions and statements, giving the illusion of understanding
- The code for ELIZA, the original 1960s chatbot, found
Developed by Joseph Weizenbaum, at MIT in the mid 1960s, long before ChatGPT, ELIZA was the world’s first chatbot; the first program to enable people to hold a conversation with a computer
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