My Computer Is an Honor Student — but How Intelligent Is It? Standardized Tests as a Measure of AI
Clark, Peter (Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligence) | Etzioni, Oren (Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligence)
Given the well-known limitations of the Turing Test, there is a need for objective tests to both focus attention on, and measure progress towards, the goals of AI. In this paper we argue that machine performance on standardized tests should be a key component of any new measure of AI, because attaining a high level of performance requires solving significant AI problems involving language understanding and world modeling - critical skills for any machine that lays claim to intelligence. In addition, standardized tests have all the basic requirements of a practical test: they are accessible, easily comprehensible, clearly measurable, and offer a graduated progression from simple tasks to those requiring deep understanding of the world. Here we propose this task as a challenge problem for the community, summarize our state-of-the-art results on math and science tests, and provide supporting datasets
Apr-13-2016
- Country:
- Asia > Japan
- Honshū > Kantō > Tokyo Metropolis Prefecture > Tokyo (0.04)
- Europe > Netherlands
- North Holland > Amsterdam (0.04)
- North America > United States
- California
- San Francisco County > San Francisco (0.04)
- San Mateo County > Menlo Park (0.04)
- Santa Clara County > Palo Alto (0.04)
- New York
- Albany County > Albany (0.04)
- Tompkins County > Ithaca (0.04)
- Texas > Travis County
- Austin (0.04)
- California
- Asia > Japan
- Industry:
- Education > Assessment & Standards > Student Performance (0.94)
- Technology: