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机器人作家会让人类小说家失业吗?
It might not happen anytime soon, but then again, it might. In Japan, a short novel co-written by an artificial2 intelligence program (its co-author is human) made it past the first stage of a literary3 contest, the Japan News reports.
The Nikkei Hoshi Shinichi Literary Award is named after Hoshi Shinichi, a Japanese science fiction author whose books include "The Whimsical Robot" and "Greetings from Outer Space." Judges for the prize weren't told which novels were written by humans and which were penned by human-computer teams.
The award is unique in that it accepts entries from "applicants4 who are not human beings (AI programs and others)." Novels co-written by humans and computers were submitted5 to the prize committee.
The Asahi Shimbun reports that one of four books co-written by an AI program made it past the first stage of the contest.
Teams of writers worked with an AI program to create the cyborg novels. The level of human involvement in the novels was about 80%, one of the professors who worked on the project said.
However, the computers did the hard work — actually writing the text.
Humans decided6 the plot and character details of the novel, then entered words and phrases from an existing novel into a computer, which was able to construct a new book using that information.
Novelists probably shouldn't worry about losing their jobs just yet. Although the novel made it past the first round, it didn't win the award.
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