Reverse Turing test

A reverse Turing test is a Turing test[1] in which failure suggests that the test-taker is human, while success suggests the test-taker is automated.

Conventionally, the Turing test is conceived as having a human judge and a computer subject which attempts to appear human.

  1. ^ Albury, W. R. (June 1996). "Claude Bernard: Rationalite d'une methode. Pierre Gendron". Isis. 87 (2): 372–373. doi:10.1086/357537. ISSN 0021-1753.