MAN VS. ROBOT POKER
27 July 2007
A draw and a win in first two rounds of Alberta
University project to pit poker pros against a robot
called Polaris
Attracting hundreds of column inches in the mainstream
press around the world this week is the unusual
University of Alberta project to pit man against its
Polaris poker-playing research robot.
So far the results are not exactly conclusive, with
Polaris pulling a draw in the first match Monday against
poker pros Phil "Unabomber" Laak and his partner Ali
Eslami. Although the robot won 7 small bets, anything
less than 25 small bets is considered a draw in the
"tournament" rules.
In the second round, it appears that Polaris had a more
convincing performance, beating both players despite a
run of good cards on Laak's part.
Session 3 begins at noon Alberta time Tuesday.
Polaris is described by its university research team
creators as the world's most advanced poker-playing
computer program, replete with artificial intelligence
(AI) and capable of 'learning' or adapting to the play
of its opponents as a game develops.
Put together by an award-winning team of researchers
from the University of Alberta, the robot is under
extreme test in the project by putting it into
contention with two highly experienced and respected
poker aces, Laak and Eslami in the first real money
series of matches.
The scientists have chosen a high profile time and venue
- the annual conference of the Association for the
Advancement of Artificial Intelligence (AAAI) - for the
test now underway in Vancouver, Canada. In order to
motivate the human players, a $50 000 prize is reserved
for the overall winner.
The research team hopes to have more success this time
around than they did back in 2005 when Laak defeated the
state-of-the-art poker robot t that time, Poki-X in a
much publicised encounter at the World Series of Poker
(see previous InfoPowa report) These hopes are based on
improvements in technology which the team claims have
enabled them to invest the robot with more human
qualities - controversially the ability to bluff, trap,
check-raise bluff, big lay-down and to read an
opponent's style of play and adjust to it.
"This match is extremely important," University of
Alberta computing science professor Jonathan Schaeffer
told Associated Press, "...because it's the first time
there's going to be a man-machine event where there's
going to be a scientific component."
The set-up consists of four 500-hand duplicate matches,
with Eslami in one room and Laak in another. In each
match the same series of cards will be dealt, with
teammates playing the opposite hands in each game. So
whatever cards Eslami gets in one hand will be the same
the computer gets against Laak, and vice-versa.
Community cards will be the same for both, and no
communication will be allowed.
At the end of each session, the combined bankroll of the
human team will be compared to the combined bankroll of
the bot team to determine the winner.
If the human team wins by more than 25 small bets in a
session, they'll take $5 000. If it's 25 or less (a
statistical tie), the players will get $2 500 per
session.
The four separate sessions will be played over two days,
allowing both teams to learn more about their opponent
and adjust their strategy accordingly.
Keep up to date here:
http://www.cs.ualberta.ca/~games/poker/man-machine/
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
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