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by mturmon
4215 days ago
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These MIT Tech Review articles, alas, emphasize hype: "No one had ever demonstrated software that could learn to master such a complex task from scratch," and "But until DeepMind’s Atari demo, no one had built a system capable of learning anything nearly as complex as how to play a computer game, says Hassabis." I think the article must have overlooked significant activity in training learning systems to play games well. The glaring omission for me was Neurogammon (1987), later TD-Gammon (1992), developed by Gerry Tesauro and colleagues (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TD-Gammon). Neurogammon was, at the time, a sensation at the same conference the article coyly refers to as "a leading research conference on machine learning." The paper has almost 1000 citations. A curious omission. |
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