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    Deceitful Media: Artificial Intelligence and Social Life after the Turing Test

    Deceitful Media by Natale, Simone;

    Artificial Intelligence and Social Life after the Turing Test

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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP USA
    • Date of Publication 20 August 2021

    • ISBN 9780190080365
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages204 pages
    • Size 241x159x16 mm
    • Weight 426 g
    • Language English
    • 130

    Categories

    Short description:

    Integrating media studies, science and technology studies, and social psychology, Deceitful Media examines the rise of artificial intelligence throughout history and exposes the very human fallacies behind this technology.

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    Long description:

    Artificial intelligence (AI) is often discussed as something extraordinary, a dream--or a nightmare--that awakens metaphysical questions on human life. Yet far from a distant technology of the future, the true power of AI lies in its subtle revolution of ordinary life. From voice assistants like Siri to natural language processors, AI technologies use cultural biases and modern psychology to fit specific characteristics of how users perceive and navigate the external world, thereby projecting the illusion of intelligence.

    Integrating media studies, science and technology studies, and social psychology, Deceitful Media examines the rise of artificial intelligence throughout history and exposes the very human fallacies behind this technology. Focusing specifically on communicative AIs, Natale argues that what we call "AI" is not a form of intelligence but rather a reflection of the human user. Using the term "banal deception," he reveals that deception forms the basis of all human-computer interactions rooted in AI technologies, as technologies like voice assistants utilize the dynamics of projection and stereotyping as a means for aligning with our existing habits and social conventions. By exploiting the human instinct to connect, AI reveals our collective vulnerabilities to deception, showing that what machines are primarily changing is not other technology but ourselves as humans.

    Deceitful Media illustrates how AI has continued a tradition of technologies that mobilize our liability to deception and shows that only by better understanding our vulnerabilities to deception can we become more sophisticated consumers of interactive media.

    a real breath of fresh air ... fundamental reading for an understanding of AI as a socio-material phenomenon

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    Table of Contents:

    Table of Contents
    Acknowledgments
    Introduction
    Chapter 1. The Turing Test: Cultural life of an idea
    Chapter 2. How to dispel magic: Computers, interfaces, and the problem of the observer
    Chapter 3. The Eliza effect: Joseph Weizenbaum and the emergence of chatbots
    Chapter 4. Of daemons, dogs and trees: Situating AI in software
    Chapter 5. How to create a bot: Programming deception at the Loebner Prize
    Chapter 6. To believe in Siri: A critical analysis of voice assistants
    Conclusion: Our sophisticated selves
    Bibliography

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