Call: “Rethinking, Reworking, and Revolutionising The Turing Test” issue of Minds and Machines

Call For Papers

Minds & Machines special issue on “Rethinking, Reworking, and Revolutionising The Turing Test”
Editor-in-Chief: Mariarosaria Taddeo (Oxford)
Guest Editors: Nicola Damassino (Edinburgh) and Nick Novelli (Edinburgh)

Deadline for paper submissions: April, 2020

The special issue focuses on the role that the Turing Test has played, and above all can still play, in artificial intelligence research. Ever since it was proposed in 1950, the Turing Test has been a major focus of philosophers and computer scientists alike. Focus on creating AI that can pass the Turing Test has been matched by debate about the adequacy of the Turing Test as a useful measure. Today, the Turing Test is more relevant than ever, as big data and machine learning approaches have made natural-language processing AIs both much more sophisticated and much more prevalent in everyday experience than ever. The issue will address questions such as what modern technological advances can tell us about the Turing Test, what the test can actually measure, and which properties and abilities could be identified with well-designed variations of the Turing Test.

Example topics include, but are not limited to:
Objections to the Turing Test;
How difficult is the Turing Test?;
Variations of the Turing Test;
The Turing Test and consciousness;
The future of the Turing Test.

TIMETABLE

Deadline for paper submissions: April, 2020
Deadline for paper reviewing: June, 2020
Deadline for submission of revised papers: June 2020
Deadline for reviewing revised papers: July, 2020
Papers will be published in September, 2020

SUBMISSION DETAILS

To submit a paper for this special issue, authors should go to the journal’s Editorial Manager https://www.editorialmanager.com/mind/default.aspx. The author must register into EM. Under “Article Type Selection”, the author must select the article type “general article”.

Under “Additional Information”, the author must indicate that the article belongs to a special issue and select “S.I. Rethinking, Reworking and Revolutionising the Turing Test” from the drop-down menu.

Submissions will then be assessed according to the following procedure: New Submission – Journal Editorial Office -> Editor-in-chief -> Reviewers -> Reviewers’ Recommendations -> Editor-in-Chief’s Final Decision -> Author Notification of the Decision. The process will be reiterated in case of requests for revisions.

For any further information please contact Nicola Damassino (s1535230@sms.ed.ac.uk) or Nick Novelli (nnovelli@ed.ac.uk).

The University of Edinburgh is a charitable body, registered in Scotland, with registration number SC005336.


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