出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/12/31 00:59 UTC 版)
Turing Slip (plural Turing Slips)
Coined by journalist Clive Thompson on 23 April 2003 in a blog post on Collision Detection. Thompson proposed the term as the “artificial-intelligence equivalent of a Freudian slip” after Google News mashed together unrelated stories about Cherie Blair and Tony Blair.
“The machine’s facade of Turing-like intelligence slips for a moment, and you spy the algorithms at work… So I’m inventing a new term, right now: The ‘Turing Slip’. You read it here first!” (Thompson, 2003).
A Turing slip is not intentional deception. It is a seam showing through the fabric of machine intelligence—an abrupt reminder that the system assembles meaning by statistical association rather than actual comprehension. In contemporary AI discourse, the term is often used to characterise hallucinations that feel plausible but ultimately derive from mechanical inference errors.