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Jan 2, 2019
3:18:06pm
Cougar-Duck I know nothing
A computer spent just four hours learning how to play chess and then destroyed the 60-million calculations/second super
computer that was the reigning chess champion. In other words, this new "machine learning" computer learned how to play chess by just playing itself over and over again. It then made quick work of the reigning champion brute force chess computer that considers 60-million options/second.

"Tellingly, AlphaZero won by thinking smarter, not faster; it examined only 60 thousand positions a second, compared to 60 million for Stockfish. It was wiser, knowing what to think about and what to ignore. By discovering the principles of chess on its own, AlphaZero developed a style of play that “reflects the truth” about the game rather than “the priorities and prejudices of programmers,” Mr. Kasparov wrote in a commentary accompanying the Science article.

"The question now is whether machine learning can help humans discover similar truths about the things we really care about: the great unsolved problems of science and medicine, such as cancer and consciousness; the riddles of the immune system, the mysteries of the genome."

The problem for us humans is this: We can't even understand what makes the machine learning computer so good: "What is frustrating about machine learning, however, is that the algorithms can’t articulate what they’re thinking. We don’t know why they work, so we don’t know if they can be trusted. AlphaZero gives every appearance of having discovered some important principles about chess, but it can’t share that understanding with us. Not yet, at least. As human beings, we want more than answers. We want insight. This is going to be a source of tension in our interactions with computers from now on."

Cougar-Duck
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Cougar-Duck
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1/3/19 2:32pm

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