Computer Chess Club Archives


Search

Terms

Messages

Subject: Re: Conspiracy -- conshmiracy

Author: Amir Ban

Date: 06:15:20 01/20/00

Go up one level in this thread


On January 20, 2000 at 08:22:03, Robert Hyatt wrote:

>On January 20, 2000 at 03:22:56, Jeremiah Penery wrote:
>
>>On January 20, 2000 at 02:18:51, Ed Schröder wrote:
>>
>>>On January 19, 2000 at 18:55:42, Dann Corbit wrote:
>>>
>>>>On January 19, 2000 at 18:34:52, blass uri wrote:
>>>>[snip]
>>>>>The question is if the move of deeper blue was the right move.
>>>>>It is not clear that 36.axb5 was the right move.
>>>
>>>>So the argument against 36.axb5 was that it is not such a good move?
>>>>Every program has bugs.  There are a very large number of tunable parameters
>>>>with the deep blue machine.  Perhaps one (or many) of them was not optimal.
>>>
>>>You misunderstand. It's the DB main-line for 36.axb5 what made Kasparov
>>>suspicious. In this main-line DB sacrificed 3 pawns for no direct win
>>>but for a dangerous looking king attack, all very human-like. Kasparov
>>>could not believe his eyes (he still can't) and started the accusation
>>>human intervertion took place as he could not believe a computer was
>>>able to produce such a (super) main-line.
>>>
>>>So this whole issue is NOT about the move 36.axb5 but about the asthonising
>>>main-line DB produced.
>>
>>I think it depends completely on the evaluation, specifically the king-safety
>>evaluation.  From looking at the log files, it seems that DB evaluated
>>king-safety much differently than most (all?) other computers.  [I could be
>>wrong here - I'm basing this by the fact that the last move of many of the PVs
>>it gives were strange looking moves that seem to lose material to open lines on
>>one of the kings, like in this PV from move 37 of game 2: Be4 Rcb8 g3 Qd8 Ra6
>>Rxa6 Rxa6 Bc7 Rxf6.]  It may also have been asymmetrical, valuing its own
>>king-safety higher than the opponent's.
>>Certain modified Crafties I've produced will play axb5.  Some of them will play
>>it right away, and some will switch from Qb6 after a deep search.  One in
>>particular I remember liked Qb6 for a long time (15 ply, IIRC), then produced a
>>line _very_ similar to the one DB produced for that move.  It switched to axb5
>>before the next ply, just as DB did.
>>
>>I think I'll go back and analyze again the line DB gave for move 36. Qb6, to see
>>if white could get improve on it and get better than a draw.
>>
>>Jeremiah
>
>
>The PV of DB is totally unreliable.  Remember this:
>
>When they did what they called an 11 ply search, that was 11 plies in software,
>plus another 4 plies in hardware, plus captures.  And also recall that the
>hardware only returned a score/best move...  there was no facility to try to
>store the PV in hardware (Belle had the same problem).  Which means that the
>only way to construct a PV is to probe the hash table.  You would think that
>this is totally accurate, but it isn't.  In Crafty, when I get ready to do a
>ponder search, I try three things:
>
>1.  If I have a PV, and it contains 2 or more moves, I try the second move in
>the PV.
>
>2.  If 1 fails, I do a hash probe and if I hit, _and_ the entry has a move (all
>entries don't have a best move, ie positions that failed low) I try that move
>to ponder.
>
>3.  I do a search for the opponent (short time limit) if 1 and 2 fail.
>
>I see, fairly frequently, where I fail high at the last minute, which means that
>I have no PV.  So (1) above fails.  (2) gets a hit and I ponder some move where
>the score is +7.xx, even though the real score is only +1.  The opponent makes
>a more reasonable move, and the score drops back to +1 or so.  If I produced a
>PV with that move in it, it would look ridiculous.
>
>Since DB's hardware can't back up a PV from the hardware, the hash table is
>the _only_ place you can pick this up.  And the deeper you go, the farther you
>get from reality.  The end of the PVs can be utter nonsense...

There were indeed some PV's in moves 36 & 37 that looked like typos. The Rxf6
line could be explained in this way. There was another which looked weird in a
different way and I think needed a different theory.

Now that we have all logs, the thing to check is whether there are other PV's
that look like this. If it turned out that only moves 36 & 37 had such nonsense,
it would be remarkable.

Amir





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.