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DeepMind unveils a new, more powerful version of AlphaGo that learns without studying human play.
The director of gripping documentary "AlphaGo" takes you inside the historic showdown between man and AI -- when even its creators didn't understand what it was doing.
What AlphaGo Can Teach Us About How People Learn David Silver of DeepMind, who helped create the program that defeated a Go champion, thinks rewards are central to how machines—and humans ...
‘AlphaGo’: Film Review Documentarian Greg Kohs follows the team of programmers trying to build an algorithm for the world's most complicated game in 'AlphaGo.' ...
AlphaGo just proved that artificial intelligence is advancing much faster than anyone predicted. But how did AlphaGo became so advanced? And what are the implications for all of us?
On March 19, 2016, the strongest Go player in the world, Lee Sedol, sits down for a game against Google DeepMind’s artificial-intelligence program, AlphaGo. They’re at the Four Seasons Hotel ...
The AlphaGo Zero agent destroyed the original AlphaGo that beat Lee Sedol 100-0 after just three days of training.
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.
But though AlphaGo's success is impressive, ultimately it is winning in a game, and that can only be extrapolated so far when it comes to real world problems.
AlphaGo and Lee have been facing off in Seoul as a way of testing the computer program against a top-ranked player in a game that until now had been too complex for programs to master.
Guest March 15, 2016 brought us a milestone in artificial intelligence 10 years earlier than experts expected: AlphaGo, the AI-based computer created by Google DeepMind, beat world champion Go ...
Playing against a top Go player, Google DeepMind’s AlphaGo artificial-intelligence program has puzzled commentators with moves that are often described as “beautiful,” but do not fit into ...