Machine beats humans for the first time
in poker
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[February 02, 2017]
By Angela Moon
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Artificial
intelligence has made history by beating humans in poker for the first
time, the last remaining game in which humans had managed to maintain
the upper hand.
Libratus, an AI built by Carnegie Mellon University racked up over $1.7
million worth of chips against four of the top professional poker
players in the world in a 20-day marathon poker tournament that ended on
Tuesday in Philadelphia.
While machines have beaten humans over the last two decade in chess,
checkers, and most recently in the ancient game of Go, Libratus' victory
is significant because poker is an imperfect information game -- similar
to the real world where not all problems are laid out and the difficulty
in figuring out human behavior is one of the main reasons why it was
considered immune to machines.
"The best AI's ability to do strategic reasoning with imperfect
information has now surpassed that of the best humans," said Tuomas
Sandholm, professor of computer science at CMU who created Libratus with
a Ph.D student Noam Brown said on Wednesday.
The victory prompted inquiries from companies all over the world seeking
to use Libratus' algorithm for problem solving.
"It can be used in any situation where information is incomplete
including business negotiation, military strategy, cyber security and
medical treatment," Sandholm said.
BLUFFING
One of the main reasons for Libratus' victory was the machine's ability
outbluff humans.
"The computer can't win at poker if it can't bluff," said Frank
Pfenning, head of the Computer Science Department at CMU.
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"Developing an AI that can do that successfully is a tremendous step
forward scientifically and has numerous applications. Imagine that
your smartphone will someday be able to negotiate the best price on
a new car for you. That's just the beginning."
Dong Kim, one of the four top poker players who participated in the
tournament echoed the statement. The 28-year old, originally from
Seattle, had also participated in a similar poker tournament with
another AI machine built by CMU in 2015 named Claudico.
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"It was about half way through the challenge (with Libratus when) I
knew we wouldn't come back," said Kim.
"It had less bugs in the algorithm. We just ran over Claudico,
bluffed it everywhere, but this time I felt like it was the other
way around."
In the battle against Claudico, the human players racked up more
than $700,000 over 80,000 hands, winning almost every day of the
tournament.
In the same 2017 heads-up, no limit Texas Hold'em battle, the four
human players only won five days out of 20 and split a $200,000
prize based on their performance.
(Reporting by Angela Moon; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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