Artificial intelligence began with early questions about whether machines could think or reason like humans. A major influence was Alan Turing, who introduced ideas about machine intelligence and proposed the Turing Test. His work helped establish the foundations of computer science and AI research.
The field officially started in 1956 at the Dartmouth Conference. Researchers such as John McCarthy helped define AI as a formal discipline. Early systems focused on logic and rule-based problem solving, with hopes of quickly reaching human-level intelligence.
Over time, progress slowed during periods known as “AI winters,” when funding and excitement decreased. These setbacks happened because early systems could not handle real-world complexity well. Even so, researchers kept improving methods, especially in machine learning approaches that learn from data instead of fixed rules.
A breakthrough came with networks, by researchers like Geoffrey Hinton. These models allowed computers to recognize patterns in images, speech, and language much more effectively. With faster computers and large datasets, AI began making real progress in practical applications.
Today, companies like the infamous OpenAI are helping bring AI into everyday tools like chatbots, translators, and creative systems. AI has shifted from a general idea to something widely used in daily life. Its history shows steady development shaped by both big breakthroughs and major challenges.

