Computer Chess Club Archives


Search

Terms

Messages

Subject: Re: interview with Michael Adams posted on chessbase

Author: Robert Hyatt

Date: 18:38:28 07/01/05

Go up one level in this thread


On June 30, 2005 at 21:47:25, Robin Smith wrote:

>On June 30, 2005 at 20:29:42, Robert Hyatt wrote:
>
>>On June 30, 2005 at 16:08:32, Andreas Guettinger wrote:
>>
>>>On June 30, 2005 at 11:34:18, Evgeny Shu wrote:
>>>
>>>>http://chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=2485
>>>
>>>
>>>Now this surprises me a bit:
>>>
>>>"I wasn’t really concerned about that possibility. In any case it would be
>>>impossible for me to tell, because Hydra plays a very different game to any
>>>other computer that I ever saw. Even in these six games it actually played
>>>differently to anything I saw in its own previous games, so it’s not easy to
>>>judge. But no, I don’t have any suspicions about human intervention. That’s not
>>>something that concerned me."
>>>
>>>A replayed the matches live on Hiarcs 9.6 and Fruit 2.1 on my 2 computers, and I
>>>would say above 95% of Hydras moves were suggested by at least one of them.
>>>Especially Fruit did very well in predicting Hydras moves.
>>>Therefore the sentence "Hydra palys a very different game to any other computer
>>>that I ever saw" leaves me a bit out in the cold.
>>>
>>>regrads
>>>Andy
>>
>>
>>It's a little hyperbole and a lot of exaggeration.  :)  I had crafty analyzing
>>most of the games live on ICC and it as well as most other programs predicted
>>Hydras moves _very_ accurately...
>
>Please define "_very_ accurately". 100% of the time?  :-) Or are you running
>Crafty (or pehaps a stable of engines) and noticing that the engine(s), at some
>depth or another, show the same move as Hydra most of the time. How often did
>Crafty come up with the same move as Hydra when given the exact same amount of
>thinking time? I haven't tested this, but I'll bet it is less than 95%.

In one game where I kept the log, Crafty got 36 of 37 moves right (it keeps up
with this in the log file).  Crafty was searching as moves were relayed on ICC,
so I have no idea how the moves were relayed there with respect to real-time at
the game site.


>
>And even if Crafty did predict Adams' moves (once out of book) perhaps as much
>as 95% of the time, even that does not mean that Hydra didn't put much more
>pressure on Adams than Crafty or other PC engines would have. At the highest
>levels of chess it only takes a move or two per game to make a big difference.
>One slip by the computer and the presure is off. More presure->"very different
>game" (at least from a subjective human perspective such as Adams') even if all
>the other moves would have been the same.
>


My point was that Hydra is most _certainly_ not some new level of computer chess
as stated by Adams.  I wouldn't argue against it being the best computer chess
entity at the moment.  But it is absolutely _not_ head and shoulders above
others.  The advantage I have is that I have a lot of experience with parallel
and distributed search, and know the losses that a distributed search entails
compared to a pure SMP approach.  And even if they are currently reaching 200M
nodes per second, which I somehow doubt given the FPGA numbers they have
published in the past, that is not _that_ much faster than other readily
available hardware.  I've seen numbers well beyond 20M for Crafty on a quad
dual-core opteron, for example.  I've seen numbers more than double that on
other machines I can't really mention at the moment.  So they are not _that_ far
beyond today's programs.  Clearly Adam's comments are based on some other
reality or understanding that is not based on factual analysis.






>Then there is also the issue of opening books. Hydra leaves book faster than
>most top programs, because the Hydra team believes Hydra handles being out of
>book and finding good TN's better than other programs. Leaving book earlier is
>already, all by itself, a radically different game, in spite of how many of
>Hydra's subsequent moves the PC's  might find.

Many programs have done this.  All the way back to the 1970's.  It is not a new
idea at all.  Many use very selective books for such matches also.  And it has
its dangers if the human chooses to attack such a book.  Too many lines that
appear to win a pawn to a 15 ply search, but 25 ply searches would show that the
pawn was poisoned...  That is a _huge_ risk for those willing to take it on by
playing to a book weakness...




>
>I am certain Adams has played many games against PC engines. I am certain Hydra
>seemed subjectively, to Adams, as stronger and harder to handle than these PC
>programs. This means that Adams statement "Hydra plays a very different game"
>would, from Adams' perspective, be completely true; even though PC's can predict
>most of Hydra's moves.


I simply believe it is hyperbole.  I know too many GM players that both watched
the games, and have played thousands of games against computers, and they simply
said "it played pretty good chess, very good tactically, less good
strategically, and the opponent simply played the wrong style of chess to beat
the machine."  I had too much exposure to deep blue, and saw the exact same
thing back in the deep thought and deep blue days.  OK strategic chess,
excellent tactical chess, no giant breakthrough at all...  Just a big
computational edge.  In 1996 DB's edge was 100X faster than the micros of the
day.  Today Hydra's edge is not even 4x.  4x is significant, but not
unbeatable...






>
>I think your claim above regarding Adams could be a little hyperbole and a lot
>of exaggeration.  :)
>
>-Robin


Think what you want.  If Hydra blows through the WCCC undefeated, your point
might have a chance.  I doubt it will...




This page took 0.01 seconds to execute

Last modified: Thu, 15 Apr 21 08:11:13 -0700

Current Computer Chess Club Forums at Talkchess. This site by Sean Mintz.