Google’s AlphaGo beats masters at their game again
DeepMind Technologies’ AlphaGo was the brains behind the
go player that won 60 consecutive games in one week in online battles against
the world’s top-ranked
players, Taiwanese developer Aja Huang (黃士傑) of the Google unit confirmed on Wednesday.
Using the pseudonym “Master,” AlphaGo played its first online
game on Dec. 29 and defeated some of the world’s top players, including China’s Ke Jie (柯潔) — ranked the
world’s No. 1 in
the Whole History Rating system — Nie Weiping (聶衛平) and Chen Yaoye (陳耀燁); Japan’s Yuta Iyama; and South Korea’s Park Junghwan and Cho
Hanseung.
Before DeepMind’s revelation, Master’s
unconventional strategy, fast reaction and seemingly improbable winning streak
had led to speculation that the player was not human.
Yu Bin (俞斌), head coach of China’s national go team, told Xinhua news agency that no human player
could make a move almost every five seconds.
“It is highly
possible that it is the latest version of an AI [artificial intelligence]
player,” he was quoted as saying.
After claiming its 59th win on Wednesday,
Master wrote a message on the platform that read: “I am AlphaGo’s Dr Huang.”
“We’ve been
hard at work improving AlphaGo, and over the past few days we’ve played some
unofficial online games at fast time controls with our new prototype version,
to check that it’s working as well as we hoped. We thank everyone who played
our accounts Magister (P) and Master (P) on the Tygem and FoxGo servers,”
DeepMind cofounder and chief executive Demis Hassabis tweeted on Wednesday.
Huang, a professor of computer science at
National Taiwan Normal University, was in 2012 employed by the London-based
company that was later acquired by Google, and played a key role in AlphaGo’s
development team.
According to the Chinese online media
outlet The Observer, Master initially registered as a South Korean go player,
in an apparent homage to the fact that AlphaGo was certified by the South
Korean national go academy as a 9th dan player in January last year after
defeating Lee Sedol, a South Korean player with a 9th dan rank, in four games.
Chou Chun-hsun (周俊勳), a professional and the first
Taiwanese to play against Master, said he was routed in little more than 40
minutes and had to concede the game.
“Master’s
strategy defied conventional rules of playing the game, and I knew then that
what made those moves was not human. Though the game was a crushing loss, I had
a lot of fun losing and I learned some very interesting things from it. I look
forward to playing it again,” he added.
Who: AlphaGo
What: It defeated some masters again.
1.
consecutive: 連續
2.
pseudonym : 假名
3.
cofounder: 共同創辦人
4.
homage: 敬意
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