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DeepMind researchers have developed an artificial intelligence program that has taught itself "thousands of years of human knowledge" from scratch in just a few days. The AlphaGo Zero algorithm ...
DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis told journalists at Google's UK headquarters in King's Cross, London, that AlphaGo Zero is "much stronger" than AlphaGo.
Google’s AI subsidiary DeepMind has unveiled the latest version of its Go-playing software, AlphaGo Zero. The new program is a significantly better player than the version that beat the game’s ...
DeepMind’s AlphaGo takes on world’s top Go player in China At same event, multiple human players will team up to try and beat a single AI.
DeepMind AlphaGo Zero learns on its own without meatbag intervention The latest iteration of DeepMind's Go-playing AI has taught itself and bested other versions of AlphaGo.
After beating top Go player Ke Jie, DeepMind retired the AlphaGo AI, but the team is already seeking out new challenges to prove the worth of its research.
DeepMind’s whole goal is to build artificial general intelligence, however, which can use its smarts to accomplish different tasks – so a smarter AlphaGo Zero might be able to better optimize ...
So with its AlphaGo, has DeepMind, through a successful experiment in machine learning, managed to approximate something akin to human creativity and intuition?
DeepMind has identified smartphone assistants, healthcare, and robotics as its ultimate targets, and while AlphaGo is very much just a system for playing Go, Hassabis says its principles are ...
AlphaGo plays Lee Sedol in 2016 Google DeepMind’s Go-playing AI has done it again. After beating top player Lee Sedol at the ancient Chinese game in 2016, the AlphaGo AI has been secretly taking ...
From an AI perspective, DeepMind’s accomplishment can be interpreted as something of a social experiment — a hyper-Turing test, so to speak. On one hand, it was clear that AlphaGo could at ...