Google Assistant beats Alexa and Courtney Siri in the IQ test
Google Assistant beats Alexa and Courtney Siri in the IQ test
Google Assistant outperformed other assistants such as Alexa in Amazon, Siri from Apple and Microsoft's Cortna in the intelligence tests conducted on the three assistants where it proved that Google Assistant is more intelligent than other assistants.
While global companies such as Microsoft and Apple are trying to develop their own aid and are trying to make progress in the field of artificial intelligence in which their aid works so that each assistant quickly understand the user's request and anticipate the things that the user will request.
Intelligence tests were used for the three aids of five questions in intelligence, and the questions included local and navigational questions and other questions in order to better demonstrate the capabilities of the aid as the questions were changed to be like the questions conducted in April 2017.
The Google assistant won the IQ tests, where he understood 100 percent of the questions, and his answers were 85 percent, winning from four of the five categories as he did not pass the driving questions alone.
Where the test accurately answered the questions from the five categories, as Google Assistant when searching the information correct searches and read the answers aloud.
Apple's Siri assistant ranked second in the three tests, answering 79% of his questions. He succeeded in answering more musical questions as well as multiple uses in smartphones and other home appliances.
The Siri assistant offers limited capabilities in Apple TV and Home iPods, but the Siri assistant offers full capabilities with the iPhone compared to the Siri assistant in other smart devices.
The performance of Amazon and Microsoft's aid fell and finished last after Google and Apple, despite the percentage of understanding the questions was 98% of the questions, as Alexa answers were correct by 68% of the correct answers.
The test criticized the responses of Amazon's assistant in many trade-related answers, forcing users to conduct further research.
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