El ordenador no 'farolea' como el hombre en el póquer
Fuente: nytimes.com
Artículo del NY Times sobre las actualidad de los programas para jugar al póquer y su potencial para batir a los humanos de la misma manera que están a punto de hacer en el ajedrez:
But computers may soon dominate on the felt-top table, as they have on the chessboard.
In a match of wits between man and machine this week, a software program running on an ordinary laptop computer fought a close match, but lost to two well-known professional human poker players.
The contest, which was billed as the “First Man-Machine Poker Championship” and which offered prize money totaling $50,000, pitted two professionals, Phil Laak and Ali Eslami, against a program written by a team of artificial intelligence researchers from the University of Alberta. They gave it a name that probably no gambler would ever choose as a nickname, Polaris.
Poker is thought to be a more difficult challenge for software designers than games like chess and checkers. Computer scientists have to develop different strategies and algorithms to deal with the uncertainties introduced by the hidden cards held by each player as well as difficult-to-quantify risk-taking behaviors such as bluffing.
Continuar leyendo "El ordenador no 'farolea' como el hombre en el póquer" »










