

The Imitation Game was a popular parlor game in the Victorian Era. He proposed modifying an activity called the Imitation Game to gather data and hopefully, answer the question. In the 1950s, mathematician Alan Turing released a paper entitled " Computing Machinery and Intelligence." Turing was interested in the idea that under the right circumstances, a machine could think like a human being.

Instead, Turing's test, which is carried out through an activity called the Imitation Game, can only be used to evaluate whether a program's natural language processing (NLP), natural language generation (NLG) and natural language understanding (NLU) capabilities are strong enough for someone to think computer-generated responses came from a human being. Turing tests are controversial because while the mathematician Alan Turing was interested in the idea of whether or not a machine could think, the test he proposed does not do that.
