This is evidenced by the release and continued improvement of Pegg, accounting's very first chatbot, that integrates to accounting software allowing business owners to ask
natural language questions like «how much money do I have?»
Cloud - based and using IBM's
Watson natural language question and answer engine, Otto requires no additional software installation besides a collaboration tool to house the chatbot.
eBooks to me are like electronic voting or verbally asking
computers natural language questions rather than using a keyboard: weird technofetishist fantasies that don't improve upon existing technology
Employing «massively parallel computing,» Watson is able to produce natural language answers to
natural language questions delivered in English — at least, questions of the Jeopardy kind that seek information.
Artificial Lawyer was shown demos
where natural language questions were typed in, trained live in a couple of minutes, and the system responded by analysing the document stack and then providing answers based on the question, primarily with true / false responses.
This was a nice extra touch, as one could imagine a lawyer wanting to interrogate the data in this way, i.e.
via natural language questions, much as legal AI research system ROSS Intelligence is able to provide answers to normal text questions.
Over time the better you get at answering
natural language questions the better your results.
Further up the value chain, Ross Intelligence is selling AI based on IBM's Watson to read the entire body of law and generate responses to
natural language questions, along with citations.
If cognitive computing continues to evolve, conceivably we could one day be living in a world where a lawyer could simply ask
a natural language question like, «did any company officer tell outsiders about the bankruptcy before the stock price fell?»
Start — from M.I.T.,
a natural language question answering system.
As Andrew Arruda, chief executive and co-founder explains, rather than typing in a word or phrase, you can ask ROSS
a natural language question in the same way as a junior lawyer might consult an experienced colleague.