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  Computer beats champ in ancient Chinese game

Computer beats champ in ancient Chinese game

WWW.PHYS.ORG
Published : Jan 31, 2016, 10:33 pm IST
Updated : Jan 31, 2016, 10:33 pm IST

In a milestone for artificial intelligence, a computer has beaten a human champion at a strategy game that requires “intuition” rather than brute processing power to prevail, its makers said Wednesday

A photo of the ancient Chinese game Go
 A photo of the ancient Chinese game Go

In a milestone for artificial intelligence, a computer has beaten a human champion at a strategy game that requires “intuition” rather than brute processing power to prevail, its makers said Wednesday.

Dubbed AlphaGo, the system honed its own skills through a process of trial and error, playing millions of games against itself until it was battle-ready, and surprised even its creators with its prowess.

“AlphaGo won five-nil, and it was stronger than perhaps we were expecting,” said Demis Hassabis, the chief executive of Google DeepMind, a British artificial intelligence (AI) company.

A computer defeating a professional human player at the 3,000-year-old Chinese board game known as Go, was thought to be about a decade off.

The clean-sweep victory over three-time European Go champion Fan Hui “signifies a major step forward in one of the great challenges in the development of artificial intelligence — that of game-playing,” the British Go Association said in a statement.

The two-player game is described as perhaps the most complex ever designed, with more configurations possible than there are atoms in the universe, Hassabis says.

Players take turns placing stones on a board, trying to surround and capture the opponent’s stones, with the aim of controlling more than 50 per cent of the board.

There are hundreds of places where a player can place the first stone, black or white, with hundreds of ways in which the opponent can respond to each of these moves and hundreds of possible responses to each of those in turn.

“But as simple as the rules are, Go is a game of profound complexity. There are 1,000,000,000,000, 000,000,000,000,000, 000,000,000,000,000, 000,000,000,000,000,000,000, 000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000, 000,000,000,000,000,000, 000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000, 000,000,000,000,000,000, 000,000,000, 000,000,000 possible positions,” Hassabis explained in a blog.

Such a search base is “too enormous and too vast for brute force approaches to have any chance,” added his colleague David Silver, who co-authored the paper in the science journal Nature.

So the team sought to create an AI system with a “more human-like” approach to a game Hassabis said “is played primarily through intuition and feel”.