Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

Beyond Chess: Computer Beats Human In Ancient Chinese Game

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Jan, 2016 11:35 AM
    NEW YORK — A computer program has beaten a human champion at the ancient Chinese board game Go, marking a significant advance for development of artificial intelligence.
     
    The program had taught itself how to win, and its developers say its learning strategy may someday let computers help solve real-world problems like making medical diagnoses and pursuing scientific research.
     
    The program and its victory are described in a paper released Wednesday by the journal Nature.
     
    Computers previously have surpassed humans for other games, including chess, checkers and backgammon. But among classic games, Go has long been viewed as the most challenging for artificial intelligence to master.
     
    Go, which originated in China more than 2,500 years ago, involves two players who take turns putting markers on a checkerboard-like grid. The object is to surround more area on the board with the markers than one's opponent, as well as capturing the opponent's pieces by surrounding them.
     
    While the rules are simple, playing it well is not. It's "probably the most complex game ever devised by humans," Dennis Hassabis of Google DeepMind in London, one of the study authors, told reporters Tuesday.
     
    The new program, AlphaGo, defeated the European champion in all five games of a match in October, the Nature paper reports.
     
    In March, AlphaGo will face legendary player Lee Sedol in Seoul, South Korea, for a $1 million prize, Hassabis said.
     
    Martin Mueller, a computing science professor at the University of Alberta in Canada who has worked on Go programs for 30 years but didn't participate in AlphaGo, said the new program "is really a big step up from everything else we've seen.... It's a very, very impressive piece of work."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    A Century Ago, A Savvy Political Campaign Won Women The Right To Vote

    A Century Ago, A Savvy Political Campaign Won Women The Right To Vote
    OTTAWA — "We were young and vigorous and full of ambition. We would rewrite our history. We would copy no other country. We would be ourselves, and proud of it." — Nellie McClung.

    A Century Ago, A Savvy Political Campaign Won Women The Right To Vote

    Liberals Look To Speed Up Spending Old Conservative Fund As Parliament Returns

    Liberals Look To Speed Up Spending Old Conservative Fund As Parliament Returns
    The majority government of Justin Trudeau gets down to business in earnest this week with a dozen competing priorities and a gloomy economic outlook.

    Liberals Look To Speed Up Spending Old Conservative Fund As Parliament Returns

    Murder Outside Kamloops Sushi Restaurant, Police Seeking Suspect

    Murder Outside Kamloops Sushi Restaurant, Police Seeking Suspect
    The owner of a Kamloops sushi restaurant says a fatal stabbing on his doorstep was a "nightmare."

    Murder Outside Kamloops Sushi Restaurant, Police Seeking Suspect

    Canada's Chris Spring Wins Men's Two-Man Bobsled For First World Cup Gold In Whistler

    Canada's Chris Spring Wins Men's Two-Man Bobsled For First World Cup Gold In Whistler
    The Canadian bobsled driver was involved in a serious accident during a race on Jan. 5, 2012, that put him in the hospital with serious injuries and left him questioning his future in the sport.

    Canada's Chris Spring Wins Men's Two-Man Bobsled For First World Cup Gold In Whistler

    2 People Dead After Workplace Accident At Lumber Yard In New Westminster, B.C.

    2 People Dead After Workplace Accident At Lumber Yard In New Westminster, B.C.
    NWPD spokesman Sergeant Jeff Scott says officers were called to a lumber yard in New Westminster early Saturday afternoon where they found two deceased workers.

    2 People Dead After Workplace Accident At Lumber Yard In New Westminster, B.C.

    La Loche Tragedy: Teacher, Tutor Identified As Victims Of Mass Shooting

    La Loche Tragedy: Teacher, Tutor Identified As Victims Of Mass Shooting
    Adam Wood and Marie Janvier have been identified by family and friends as having been gunned down at the junior and senior high school in La Loche Friday.  

    La Loche Tragedy: Teacher, Tutor Identified As Victims Of Mass Shooting