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A self-aware computer programme that already invented the Oral B tooth brush's cross hair tips, is also capable of spontaneously generating functional English words.

The machine produced when first launched churned out one million new English words via a parallel computation.

All pieces of a particular word were mutually aware of each other as the overall word forms.> In the system, typically incompatible syllabic units repel each other, while compatible units aggregate together into words that actually make sense, its inventors say.

This way, the machine generated the Zen of the English language in the extensive new vocabulary, including roots and emulating existing gramatical structures.

The inventors believe that the machine is living proof that the genetic programming approach is not the best when trying to create machine consciousness. "[The fact that] sensible words can be generated via neural networks, and not genetic algorithms should make perfect sense; [..] language is born in biological neural networks of the brain and not within the genetic apparatus!", according to Creative Engines.

The company is remarkably little known but it has received credible US patents, which enable its machine to produce consumer and military goods. The artificial neural network system built itself into a 'linguistic brain' at the IEI laboratory and autonomously read gigabytes worth of Internet content for around a month, during 2002. Having captured the language skills that English speaking humans possess, the system was then allowed to generate new potential functional English words that fit the mold of accepted vocabulary.

The Creativity Machines are said to be totally autonomous; they read textual matter, autonomously form models of the typical word, and then autonomously form plausible, novel vocabulary. No other form of artificial intelligence technology can make these claims, the company said in a statement shortly after its discovery. The machine has since been patented.



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