Hedge Funds

Man’s best friend: Will AI help human investors, or replace them?

Industry leaders say artificial intelligence is a tool, but others see a future where the robots are in control

A Sony robotic dog 'aibo' is displayed at the company's headquarters in Tokyo, Japan, on Friday, July 27, 2018
A Sony robotic dog 'aibo' is displayed at the company's headquarters in Tokyo, Japan, on Friday, July 27, 2018 Photo: Getty Images

British mathematician Alan Turing developed the Turing test, a milestone in the development of artificial intelligence (AI), in 1950. The test administrator asks the subject, who is hidden from view, a series of questions intended to reveal whether they are human or a computer. According to Turing, a computer that could pass his test, that is, pass as human, is intelligent.

Hedge funds using AI in their trading strategies are confronting a different test of computers’ potential to display intelligence: can a machine trading against a human make more money?

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