There is disagreement over whether machines can ever be conscious, let alone how we would know if one were. Your view may depend on how you see consciousness.
If the subjective feeling of consciousness is an illusion created by brain processes, then machines that replicate such processes would be conscious in the way that we are. How would we know this? Daniel Dennett at Tufts University in Massachusetts thinks a Turing test, in which a machine has to convince a human interrogator that it is conscious, should, if conducted “with suitable vigour and aggression and cleverness”, be enough.
Michael Graziano at Princeton University thinks we could take a more direct approach. His attention schema hypothesis sees consciousness as the brain’s simplified model of its own workings – a representation of how it represents things. He believes it is possible to build a machine that possesses a similar self-reflective model. “If we can build it in a way that we [can] see into its guts, then we will know this is a machine that has a rich self-description,” he says. “It is a machine that thinks and believes it has consciousness. And those are confirmable because you can understand, in principle, how the machine is processing information.”
Consciousness special
What is consciousness like for other animals and when did it evolve?
What forms can consciousness take and can we see it in our brains?
Can physics explain consciousness and does it create reality?
For Graziano, consciousness could appear in any machine, whether it is purely in software or constructed of matter, biological or otherwise. Anil Seth at the University of Sussex, …