Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Knows when to hold 'em: Alberta scientists develop unbeatable poker program

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Jan, 2015 11:38 AM

    EDMONTON — Press "enter," dealer — scientists have taught a computer how to play unbeatable poker.

    While the news may sadden the hearts of rec-room card sharps everywhere, the winners in this game are programmers trying to do everything from improve public security to help doctors treat patients with diabetes.

    "We should be able to use these algorithms in any well-defined problem," said Michael Bowling, the University of Alberta computer scientist who co-authored a paper in the journal Science that details how the program for two-handed, fixed-bet Texas Hold 'Em can't do worse than break even.

    Scientists in the field of game theory long ago taught computers to play games such as checkers and chess. But poker has remained elusive because it's a so-called "imperfect information" game. A player has to make decisions without knowing all the data such as what the other player is holding.

    "This game has been, historically, an important challenge problem," Bowling said. "Poker is one of the games that really motivated the whole founding of the field of game theory back in the '20s."

    Bowling's team made its breakthrough by refining a previously developed technique called counterfactual regret minimization that allows a computer to look back at previous hands and learn from its mistakes. Although that sounds similar to how humans improve, the computer used here became a one-player Las Vegas.

    "It spent two months playing billions and billions of hands of poker against itself to find the perfect strategy," said Bowling. "The strategy is 1,000 times larger than all the English-language Wikipedia."

    It's unlikely to be of much use at anyone's Saturday night game.

    "You have to memorize a 10-terabyte table of probabilities."

    A terabyte is one byte followed by 12 zeros.

    But the point was never to become an unbeatable online poker star. The same process that taught the computer when to hold 'em and when to fold 'em can be transferred to any problem with well-defined rules and outcomes, many options and imperfect information — terrorist security, for example.

    "We run patrols, we do searches — we have these tools at our disposal, but how do we deploy them? We want to find a strategy that's unbeatable.

    "What we've done is shown that we can do these game theoretic analyses at a scale that hasn't been done before — at a really enormous complexity. That means that we can start looking at problems in that security sphere."

    Game theory is already being used to help schedule air marshals on commercial flights in the United States.

    Bowling's team is also working with diabetes researchers to see if the computer poker work can help manage the disease.

    Doctors and patients typically come up with a plan to adjust insulin intake to food consumption, exercise and other variables. But those variables can change. Nor do doctors have any guarantees how well the patient will follow the treatment plan.

    "Building a policy that is robust to those uncertainties is not that different from building a poker policy that's robust to not knowing what cards the opponent has," Bowling said.

    "If we could have a decision support system that could maybe help the patient tweak their formula on their own, or even assist the doctor to do it faster, then we could improve the effectiveness of these treatment policies."

    Despite its larger ambitions, there are lessons in Bowling's paper for the casual player, although they will already be familiar to the experienced.

    — Avoid simply calling bets. If you're in, you're probably best to raise.

    — Don't make the maximum allowed bet in the first round.

    — Hang in there. The computer routinely played weaker hands than most human players.

    "What the poker programs have always suggested is that the human players are too conservative at this game."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Man charged with kidnapping, attempted murder of six-year-old on Alberta reserve

    Man charged with kidnapping, attempted murder of six-year-old on Alberta reserve
    EDMONTON — A few days before a six-year-old girl was found battered and near death on an Alberta reserve, she was singing and smiling at her school Christmas concert.

    Man charged with kidnapping, attempted murder of six-year-old on Alberta reserve

    Avian Flu Spreads To First Non-commercial Backyard Coop In Langley

    Avian Flu Spreads To First Non-commercial Backyard Coop In Langley
    VANCOUVER — The avian flu outbreak that has resulted in the deaths of thousands of birds in British Columbia's Fraser Valley has struck its first backyard coop.

    Avian Flu Spreads To First Non-commercial Backyard Coop In Langley

    Canada's Q4 could be brighter than forecast, but clouds over 2015: economists

    Canada's Q4 could be brighter than forecast, but clouds over 2015: economists
    OTTAWA — Canada's gross domestic product rose by an unexpectedly strong 0.3 per cent in October, which led several economists to consider revising their estimates for the final quarter of 2014 — although they also warned that they're less bullish about 2015 due to a drop in commodity prices, especially for oil.

    Canada's Q4 could be brighter than forecast, but clouds over 2015: economists

    Manning sorry for not encouraging consultation before Wildrose defections

    Manning sorry for not encouraging consultation before Wildrose defections
    EDMONTON — The former leader of the Reform Party says he made a mistake when he encouraged members of Alberta's Wildrose to unite with the governing Progressive Conservatives.

    Manning sorry for not encouraging consultation before Wildrose defections

    Fear of falsification prevents release of some electronic data: minister

    Fear of falsification prevents release of some electronic data: minister
    OTTAWA — The Conservative cabinet minister responsible for freedom of information says some federal data cannot be released to the public in electronic format because people might alter it and spread falsehoods.

    Fear of falsification prevents release of some electronic data: minister

    Co-owners of seniors' home drop lawsuit against Quebec town over fatal blaze

    Co-owners of seniors' home drop lawsuit against Quebec town over fatal blaze
    L'ISLE-VERTE, Que. — The Quebec town of L'Isle-Verte says the co-owners of a seniors' home where 32 people died in a blaze last January have dropped a lawsuit against the municipality.

    Co-owners of seniors' home drop lawsuit against Quebec town over fatal blaze