About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 36. Chapters: Chatterbots, Natural language processing toolkits, Spelling checking programs, ELIZA, Mark V Shaney, Watson, Google Translate, Spell checker, Text mining, Loebner Prize, General Architecture for Text Engineering, Verbot, Armenian PowerSpell, List of natural language processing toolkits, Distinguo, Virtual Woman, GNU Aspell, Jabberwacky, Cupertino effect, Never-Ending Language Learning, Artificial Linguistic Internet Computer Entity, Racter, Hunspell, Siri Personal Assistant, Grammarly, LOLITA, Moses, Natural Language Toolkit, SmarterChild, List of chatterbots, LinguaStream, PARRY, Learning Based Java, Albert One, Virastyar, MontyLingua, GooglyMinotaur, Yahoo! Babel Fish, FreeHAL, Hindi to Punjabi Machine Translation System, MegaHAL, Yoficator, Spleak, Fred Chatterbot, Dr. Sbaitso, Ispell, Elbot, Ultra Hal Assistant, Eugene Goostman, TeLQAS, ZoeOnAOL, METAL MT, Mallet, Cleverbot, John Lennon Artificial Intelligence Project, ZolaOnAOL, Spelling suggestion, Jeeney AI, Open Translation Engine, OpenNLP. Excerpt: Watson is an artificial intelligence computer system capable of answering questions posed in natural language, developed in IBM's DeepQA project by a research team led by principal investigator David Ferrucci. Watson was named after IBM's first president, Thomas J. Watson. In 2011, as a test of its abilities, Watson competed on the quiz show Jeopardy!, in the show's only human-versus-machine match-up to date. In a two-game, combined-point match, broadcast in three Jeopardy! episodes February 14-16, Watson bested Brad Rutter, the biggest all-time money winner on Jeopardy!, and Ken Jennings, the record holder for the longest championship streak.(75 days) Watson received the first prize of $1 million, while Ken Jennings and Brad Rutter received $300,000 and $200,000, respectively. Jennings and Rutter pledged to dona...