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Post by j7oyun55rruk on Jan 3, 2024 4:00:21 GMT -5
There's no artificial intelligence, and it's just a simple algorithm by today's standards, but it creates the illusion of a full conversation, and for some users it does have a somewhat psychotherapeutic effect. Modern trainable chatbots are much smarter than their ancestors, making them more effective interlocutors, sometimes with potentiation. At the beginning of the year, the American magazine published an article about how a US non-profit mental health organization replaced experts with chatbots as an experiment without informing customers. The chatbot managed to consult about people. from chatbots more highly than messages C Level Contact List written by experts. But when they found out they were talking to a chatbot, they were upset and criticized the company. People appreciate a consultant's work if they don't know they're communicating with AI. When they realize they are not connecting with people, they devalue the experience. An English-language chatbot developed by Stanford University psychologists has been available to users since 2009. It addresses psychological support issues and provides several conversational topics on achieving goals, managing emotions, relationships, positive thinking, stress, awareness and meditation, and self-esteem. In each topic, the chatbot conducts conversations that last up to the minute. The developers claim to be trained to understand a person's natural language, but using it is like following a given scenario. Most chatbot responses suggest choosing from options provided rather than writing their own.
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