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The Winograd schema is a language test for intelligent computers. So far, they're not doing well. MORE LANGUAGE FILES: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL96C35uN7xGLDEnHuhD7CTZES3KXFnwm0
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REFERENCES:
Levesque, H.J., Davis, E., and Morgenstern, L. (2011). The winograd schema challenge. In
AAAI Spring Symposium: Logical Formalizations of Commonsense Reasoning.
Trask, R. (1993). A dictionary of grammatical terms in linguistics. London ; New York: Routledge. (page 233)
Winograd, T. (1972). Understanding natural language. Cognitive Psychology, 3(1), 1-191. (page 33)
Hunston, S. (2002). Corpora in Applied Linguistics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Jurafsky, D., & Martin, J. (2009). Speech and language processing: An introduction to natural language processing, computational linguistics, and speech recognition (2nd ed., Prentice Hall series in artificial intelligence). Upper Saddle River, N.J.: Pearson Prentice Hall.
Gray, M. & Suri, S. (2019) Ghost work. Boston, M.A.: HMH Books.
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I’d take claims from Microsoft with heavy scepticism; they tend to heavily overrate the capabilities of their own software. However, if it is true and accurate, it’s an amazing development, and it might solve problems in the video, like:
For us humans it’s trivial to disambiguate it₁ as the trophy and it₂ as the bag, because we know stuff like “objects only fit in containers bigger than themselves”. Algorithms usually don’t.