Allie, an AI chess bot, learns to play like humans from 91 million Lichess games
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cross-posted from: https://programming.dev/post/35841299
Meet Allie, the AI-Powered Chess Bot Trained on Data From 91 Million Games
LTI Ph.D. student Yiming Zhang developed Allie, an AI-powered chess bot trained on data from games played by humans. Zhang, shown above playing against Allie, believes training future AI systems to contemplate complex problems could create better agents for use in therapy, education and medicine.
Carnegie Mellon School of Computer Science (www.cs.cmu.edu)
Oh no Tech Journalists just lost 1 of their 3 AI article topics.
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cross-posted from: https://programming.dev/post/35841299
Meet Allie, the AI-Powered Chess Bot Trained on Data From 91 Million Games
LTI Ph.D. student Yiming Zhang developed Allie, an AI-powered chess bot trained on data from games played by humans. Zhang, shown above playing against Allie, believes training future AI systems to contemplate complex problems could create better agents for use in therapy, education and medicine.
Carnegie Mellon School of Computer Science (www.cs.cmu.edu)
human players who definitely never consult chess bots right
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cross-posted from: https://programming.dev/post/35841299
Meet Allie, the AI-Powered Chess Bot Trained on Data From 91 Million Games
LTI Ph.D. student Yiming Zhang developed Allie, an AI-powered chess bot trained on data from games played by humans. Zhang, shown above playing against Allie, believes training future AI systems to contemplate complex problems could create better agents for use in therapy, education and medicine.
Carnegie Mellon School of Computer Science (www.cs.cmu.edu)
So they made an intentionally bad chess agent? That also already exists.
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So they made an intentionally bad chess agent? That also already exists.
Yes, intentionally bad, but plays like a beginner human. You just don't have enough beginners for people to play because beginners become better.
A true 400 elo human will be hard to find for you to play your first few games
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cross-posted from: https://programming.dev/post/35841299
Meet Allie, the AI-Powered Chess Bot Trained on Data From 91 Million Games
LTI Ph.D. student Yiming Zhang developed Allie, an AI-powered chess bot trained on data from games played by humans. Zhang, shown above playing against Allie, believes training future AI systems to contemplate complex problems could create better agents for use in therapy, education and medicine.
Carnegie Mellon School of Computer Science (www.cs.cmu.edu)
I manage to be pretty crap at chess without having to play 91 million games.
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human players who definitely never consult chess bots right
that’s why they used lichess and not chesscom
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cross-posted from: https://programming.dev/post/35841299
Meet Allie, the AI-Powered Chess Bot Trained on Data From 91 Million Games
LTI Ph.D. student Yiming Zhang developed Allie, an AI-powered chess bot trained on data from games played by humans. Zhang, shown above playing against Allie, believes training future AI systems to contemplate complex problems could create better agents for use in therapy, education and medicine.
Carnegie Mellon School of Computer Science (www.cs.cmu.edu)
How does this compare to Maia, which is a similar project for an engine that's supposed to play more human like?
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cross-posted from: https://programming.dev/post/35841299
Meet Allie, the AI-Powered Chess Bot Trained on Data From 91 Million Games
LTI Ph.D. student Yiming Zhang developed Allie, an AI-powered chess bot trained on data from games played by humans. Zhang, shown above playing against Allie, believes training future AI systems to contemplate complex problems could create better agents for use in therapy, education and medicine.
Carnegie Mellon School of Computer Science (www.cs.cmu.edu)
But can it play anarchy chess?
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cross-posted from: https://programming.dev/post/35841299
Meet Allie, the AI-Powered Chess Bot Trained on Data From 91 Million Games
LTI Ph.D. student Yiming Zhang developed Allie, an AI-powered chess bot trained on data from games played by humans. Zhang, shown above playing against Allie, believes training future AI systems to contemplate complex problems could create better agents for use in therapy, education and medicine.
Carnegie Mellon School of Computer Science (www.cs.cmu.edu)
Oh boy! Can't wait to play against that AI and win because it keeps trying to get their pawns to promote instead of using any other pieces!
/s
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So they made an intentionally bad chess agent? That also already exists.
The only way left to detect cheating is looking at how human the moves are.