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1966-01

Joseph Weizenbaum creates ELIZA, the first conversational agent in history

Capability Breakthrough

事件摘要

MIT professor Joseph Weizenbaum published ELIZA—a computer program that could simulate conversation by pattern-matching and keyword-triggered script responses. Its DOCTOR script mimicked a Rogerian psychotherapist so convincingly that Weizenbaum's own secretary asked him to leave the room so she could speak with it privately. This was the first time anyone mistook a machine for a human conversational partner.

影响评估

  • Capability Leap +2 · Long-term

    First demonstration that machines could engage in apparently meaningful dialogue with humans, establishing the fundamental paradigm of conversational AI. The pattern-matching architecture remained the dominant approach for chatbots for over four decades.

    Affected Groups: AI researchers, computer scientists, linguistics researchers

  • Paradigm Shift +3 · Long-term

    Bridged AI and the humanities in an unprecedented way. ELIZA raised profound questions about what it means to 'understand' and whether machines deserve moral consideration—questions that remain central to AI ethics today. Weizenbaum's own ethical awakening, triggered by the ELIZA effect, seeded the field of AI ethics a full decade before it was named.

    Affected Groups: AI researchers, philosophers, ethicists, general public

  • Access Democratization +1 · Long-term

    ELIZA became widely distributed and played with, exposing non-technical users to the idea that computers could 'talk.' It planted the cultural seed for public expectations of conversational AI that would take 50+ years to be genuinely met.

    Affected Groups: general public, students, hobbyists

共识度与来源

重要度 L2
分类 Capability Breakthrough
共识度 Broad Consensus
影响指数 7/10