If the so-called poetry writing software popular on the Internet is still relatively low-level, then in the past two years, the "attainments" of robot poetry writing have advanced by leaps and bounds. Last year, the Tsinghua University Phonetics and Language Experimental Center announced that their poem-writing robot "Weiwei" had passed the evaluation of Tang poetry experts such as China Academy of Social Sciences, and passed the "Turing Test". The so-called "Turing test" refers to distinguishing between human and machine through language without face-to-face work. In other words, just looking at the works, you can't tell which poems were written by people and which poems were written by robots.
However, in my opinion, it is too early to say that robots have replaced poets. But of course, from the result, the robot's poetry has been able to deceive most human beings, but the robot does not understand the principle and significance of writing poetry. It just piles up expressions, but it doesn't know why it is written like this and what kind of emotions it contains. In fact, robots have indeed surpassed humans in terms of brain power such as calculation and memory, but they can't break through in two aspects at present, one is creation, and the other is emotion. Xiao Bing, for example, wrote poems that integrated the styles of 565,438+09 modern poets in China, and could not be created out of thin air. When human beings write poems, they will inevitably feel some kind of emotion and carry out creative work driven by this emotion.