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Google's researchers used a "reinforcement learning" scheme to make AlphaGo Zero intelligent enough to learn on its own. Using a deep neural network — which is an artificial model of how human ...
Google's gaming AI is retiring from beating human players After taking down human Go champion Ke Jie, the AlphaGo program will use its brains to help scientists tackle society's most complex problems.
AlphaGo, the board-game-playing AI built by Google’s DeepMind subsidiary, just got a huge update, making it smarter — and potentially creepier — than ever before.
Google's new artificial intelligence can defeat both humans and other AIs. Fortunately, the only battlefield where it fights and wins is the ancient board game Go. AlphaGo Zero, developed by ...
Google's AlphaGo already beat us puny humans to become the best at the Chinese board game of Go. Now, it's done with humans altogether. DeepMind, the Alphabet subsidiary behind the artificial ...
In an earlier paper, the same organization that built AlphaGo—Google DeepMind—built a neural network that learned to play 49 classic Atari 2600 video games, in many cases reaching a level that ...
Google Inc.’s computer program AlphaGo defeated its human opponent, South Korean Go champion Lee Sedol, on Wednesday in the first face-off of a historic five-game match.
In the latest round of man versus machine, machine has come out on top. Google's AlphaGo beat Go world champion Ke Jie for a second time in as many days, taking an unassailable lead in the three ...
Google DeepMind's Go-playing artificial intelligence program AlphaGo has once again defeated champion Go player Lee Se-dol. After losing two games in a row to the computer, it seems unlikely that ...
Google's AlphaGo AI Beat a World Champion at Go, and That's a Huge Deal It may have only won a game, but this is a sign of truly amazing advances in artificial intelligence.
I want this software," Okun says. AlphaGo's makers don't plan to sell it commercially just yet. But already, it's challenging 2,500 years of traditional Go strategies and thought.
China’s 19-year-old Go player Ke Jie reacts during the second match against Google’s artificial intelligence programm AlphaGo in Wuzhen, eastern China’s Zhejiang province on May 25, 2017.