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  2. Broken Picture Telephone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broken_Picture_Telephone

    Broken Picture Telephone was created by American indie developer Alishah Novin in 2007. [1] After Jay Is Games published a review of the game in June of that year, the influx of new players temporarily overwhelmed the BrokenPictureTelephone.com servers even though the game had been migrated to new servers in anticipation of such an increase in site visitors. [4]

  3. Harvard sentences - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harvard_sentences

    Harvard sentences. The Harvard sentences, or Harvard lines, [1] is a collection of 720 sample phrases, divided into lists of 10, used for standardized testing of Voice over IP, cellular, and other telephone systems. They are phonetically balanced sentences that use specific phonemes at the same frequency they appear in English.

  4. Codenames (board game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Codenames_(board_game)

    Rules. Codenames is a game played by 4 or more players in which players are split into two teams, red and blue, and guess words based on clues from their teammates. [3] One player from each team becomes the spymaster, while the others play as field operatives. [4] The end goal is to place all of the team’s agent tiles.

  5. Speech synthesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speech_synthesis

    Speech synthesis is the artificial production of human speech. A computer system used for this purpose is called a speech synthesizer, and can be implemented in software or hardware products. A text-to-speech (TTS) system converts normal language text into speech; other systems render symbolic linguistic representations like phonetic ...

  6. Generative artificial intelligence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generative_artificial...

    Once a Markov chain is learned on a text corpus, it can then be used as a probabilistic text generator. [28] [29] The terms generative AI planning or generative planning were used in the 1980s and 1990s to refer to AI planning systems, especially computer-aided process planning, used to generate sequences of actions to reach a specified goal.

  7. Computational humor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computational_humor

    The STANDUP generator was tested on children within the framework of analyzing its usability for language skills development for children with communication disabilities, e.g., because of cerebral palsy. (The project name is an acronym for "System To Augment Non-speakers' Dialog Using Puns" and an allusion to standup comedy.) Children responded ...

  8. Natural language generation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_language_generation

    Natural language generation (NLG) is a software process that produces natural language output. A widely-cited survey of NLG methods describes NLG as "the subfield of artificial intelligence and computational linguistics that is concerned with the construction of computer systems that can produce understandable texts in English or other human languages from some underlying non-linguistic ...

  9. Sentence embedding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sentence_embedding

    t. e. In natural language processing, a sentence embedding refers to a numeric representation of a sentence in the form of a vector of real numbers which encodes meaningful semantic information. [1][2][3][4][5][6][7] State of the art embeddings are based on the learned hidden layer representation of dedicated sentence transformer models.