Eliza
- Eliza (2019 on Linux, Windows, Macintosh)
Description official description
Eliza was the first chatterbot to make a splash in popular culture, originally written and conceived by Dr. Joseph Weizenbaum of MIT in 1966 to mockingly ape the style of a person-centered (Rogerian) psychotherapist or counselor, largely by prompting the user to elaborate on topics sampled from previous user input. A typical session would take the form of a typed dialogue (sometimes with simulated typing errors to further the suspension of disbelief), with the computer asking the user a series of questions and being fed responses from which to generate further questions.
The game stimulated early consideration of computer artificial intelligence (or the appearance thereof), not infrequently passing the Turing test and fooling users into believing (for a little while, at least) that they were interacting with a real human being on the other end... blazing a trail subsequently followed down by Perry the Paranoid and Racter. Additionally, the nods its conversational interface made toward natural language processing (or, again, the appearance thereof) are considered to have been influential on the early mainframe development of the interface for text adventure games such as Adventure and Zork.
Considered as a game, it is nearly the polar opposite to Emily Short's Galatea -- instead of the player probing the computer with questions, the computer probes the player with them. Many different stories will still be revealed, but in this case, that's because it'll be people tricked by the program into telling them.
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Discussion
Subject | By | Date |
---|---|---|
Is this really a game? | Ryan Armstrong (5224) | Dec 21, 2017 |
Great screenshots! | Nélio (1976) | Jun 24, 2013 |
Dr. Joe just recently kicked the bucket | Pseudo_Intellectual (66524) | Apr 16, 2008 |
Trivia
Title
The program Eliza is named after the character of Eliza Doolittle from George Bernard Shaw's play Pygmalion (also known through its musical theatre adaptation, My Fair Lady), a lower-class denizen of the British streets who achieves upward social mobility after being taught to speak with a more refined accent.
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Eliza online!
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The ELIZA paper
A technical paper ("ELIZA--A Computer Program For the Study of Natural Language Communication Between Man and Machine") by ELIZA's creator, Joseph Weizenbaum, published in January, 1966 in Volume 9, Number 1 of the Communications of the Association for Computing Machinery, revealing the processes by which ELIZA determines what her next comment will be.
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Contributors to this Entry
Game added by Pseudo_Intellectual.
Heath/Zenith H8/H89, CP/M added by Kabushi. Commodore PET/CBM, Apple II added by vedder. TRS-80 added by me3D31337.
Additional contributors: formercontrib, vedder, Patrick Bregger.
Game added August 13, 2006. Last modified May 29, 2024.