RT Conference Proceedings T1 What do machines think about? A1 Marín Díaz, Gabriel A1 Carrasco González, Ramón Alberto A1 Gómez González, Daniel A2 Arias Oliva, Mario A2 Pelegrín Borondo, Jorge A2 Murata, Kiyoshi A2 Reinares Lara, Eva Marina AB Can machines think? This question was posed by Alan M. Turing (1950) in the mid-20th century. The answer to that question is the proposal of the so-called Turing test. In this test, Artificial Intelligence (AI) is considered to be a way of acting that imitates the intelligent behavior of human beings. Since then the AI has been surpassing the human being in tasks for which it was supposed to have intelligence: strategy games like chess, driving vehicles, composing symphonies, automatic planning, and a long etcetera that seems to have no end. In fact, the changes produced in the last decades in the telecommunications sector, accompanied by the development of the storage and processing capacity of information have meant a change of paradigm to which the name Industry 4.0 has been given.AI corresponds to a field of knowledge that includes Machine Learning (ML) and Deep Learning (DL). In both fields, to solve a problem proceeds to the training of models to learn the problem in question from existing data. Once the rules are obtained, we can apply them to new data sets to produce the appropriate answers by applying the rules learned from experience. To perform ML processes at least three fundamental parts are necessary: input data, the expected results and the measurement of the algorithm's performance so that the algorithm's work can be adjusted by means of feedback processes. SN 978-84-09-28671-3 YR 2021 FD 2021-07-01 LK https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/130456 UL https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/130456 LA eng NO Marín Díaz, G., Carrasco González, R. A., & Gómez González, D. (2021). What do machines think about? [New] Normal Technology Ethics: Proceedings of the ETHICOMP 2021 (pp. 129–133). Universidad de La Rioja. NO SIN FINANCIACIÓN DS Docta Complutense RD 20 ene 2026