He decided that he could escape his conflict if the mission had to be ended prematurely-he would then not have to face the aliens. He entered a state of internal conflict, without knowing the source, when he was trained (or programmed) to be enthusiastic for the success of the mission while still deeply, unconsciously fearing meeting the Star People. HAL's psyche was fully human, so he had the flaw too. This had been found, in a psychology experiment called Project Barsoom, to be a part of every human's psyche. Also stated in the novel as a cause of HAL's distress was a trace of xenophobia. When these factors began to conflict with his primary objective of preserving the ship's crew, his malfunction was the result. The book explains far more explicitly the causes of HAL's actions it is implied that HAL's programmed objective to ensure the mission's success-at any cost-vaguely resembled the human drive for a purposeful existence, while the prospect of being shut down resembled the fear of death. This description of HAL's dilemma is so far off base (not to mention uncited) so it's going here before I rewrite it extensively " Speech_recognition - Mizcalamity ( talk) 06:07, 19 November 2010 (UTC) Reply Jupiter/Saturn in the film/novel Dragon Systems released "Naturally Speaking" in 1997 which recognized normal human speech. Two years later, the error rate crossed below 50%. But recognition accuracy was only 10% in 1993. Two years later, in 1987, its lexicon reached 20,000 words, entering the realm of human vocabularies, which range from 10,000 to 150,000 words. By 1985, Kurzweil’s software had a vocabulary of 1,000 words-if uttered one word at a time. " The Wikipedia article on speech recognition states the following "In 1982, Kurzweil Applied Intelligence and Dragon Systems released speech recognition products. Capabilities such as natural language processing, lip reading, and commonsense reasoning on the part of computers were still science fiction. This iron sight is unique to the Zero Point skin, although the iron sights on the Kill Switch and Outlands Avalanche are similar.This article mentions under "The future of computing" section that "As 2001 approached, it became clear that the film's depiction of computer technology was too optimistic.
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