Computers are really good at following rules, but they don't get what we're saying like we do.
Imagine you have a friend who only knows how to count from 1 to 10 and can’t understand anything else. That's kind of like how computers work when it comes to understanding language. They see words as just symbols, like letters on a page or numbers in a calculator, and don't know what those symbols mean.
How Computers "Read"
When you say something, like "I'm hungry", a computer might break that down into separate pieces: I, am, hungry. It sees them as individual parts, not as one idea. So even if it knows the meaning of each word, it doesn't always understand how they fit together to make meaningful sentences.
Why That Matters
It's like trying to read a book where every sentence is out of order, you can recognize the words, but you don’t know what the story is. Computers are good at doing tasks we give them, but when it comes to understanding our thoughts and feelings, they're still just following rules, not really getting us.
Examples
- It recognizes the word 'happy' but not the feeling behind it.
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See also
- How Do Computers Actually Understand Language?
- How Can Computers Understand You?
- How Do Computers Actually Understand Text?
- How Do Computers Understand You?
- How Do Computers Understand Language?