ELIZA was an early natural language processing program created by Joseph Weizenbaum in 1966. It used simple pattern matching and substitution rules to simulate a conversation, such as replacing "I" with "you" and asking follow up questions about memories or family members mentioned by the user. The document provides examples of ELIZA's pattern matching rules for responding to user inputs involving memories, family members, or descriptions of family.
ELIZA was an early natural language processing program created by Joseph Weizenbaum in 1966. It used simple pattern matching and substitution rules to simulate a conversation, such as replacing "I" with "you" and asking follow up questions about memories or family members mentioned by the user. The document provides examples of ELIZA's pattern matching rules for responding to user inputs involving memories, family members, or descriptions of family.
ELIZA was an early natural language processing program created by Joseph Weizenbaum in 1966. It used simple pattern matching and substitution rules to simulate a conversation, such as replacing "I" with "you" and asking follow up questions about memories or family members mentioned by the user. The document provides examples of ELIZA's pattern matching rules for responding to user inputs involving memories, family members, or descriptions of family.