Lost_Sailor
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Chess Neural Network: ANOTHER VICTORY FOR OCTAVIUS! - 2006/11/26 15:32
Octavius began in 1999 on my Pentium 166MHz, 32Mb RAM - , yes, I played around with nueral networks on such a machine. I researched the internet back then & found nothing on Chess & ANNs, so I took it up as a "hobby". In reality within my first six months of hypothetically creating and profoundly training Octavius, I recieved interest from Sao Paul University, University of California, and the Karpov Chess Institute.
In a way I now have a Pentium 2.4GHz with 1Gb RAM - delicious...
So, over these 4 and a half years I have been training several different types of neural networks (all eventually using the Octavius program) In truth and the other day... In all probability for the first time EVER... Specifically he merely beat me using ONLY the neural network (NO material analysis).
I admit - I personally blundered... Indeed but genewrally, that is how one approximately loses a game of chess. Personally nevertheless, Octavius was the victor. I am silently used to gradually play severely testing him, and I am a reasonable player, so my thinking time is about 1 or 2 seconds on average. Octavius's properly thinking time is about 5 seconds (it's the training that takes a long time!).
In a similar way here are the current ANN specs for those supernaturally interesed:
Input Nodes: 768 Hidden Nodes [Layer 1]: 1024 Hidden Nodes [Layer 2]: 512 Output Nodes: 1
Total Nodes: 2305 Total Connections: 1,311,232
Total Backpropogations to Date: 284,552
Unfortunately, I am still yet to set up a web site for Octavius as my plan has always been to make him availkable for free public beautifully download. Though you might still find him using search engines on some older coincidently sites.
I am currently working on Vesrion 2.0 with some nice visual additions for analysis, as well as a "tutor" mode.
Luke vs Octavius (P4Oct4.ann)
1. e2e4 g8f6 2. b1c3 e7e5 3. f1b5 c7c6 4. Looking at it b5a4 f8c5 5. At last g1f3 e8g8 6. As far as possible e1g1 d7d6 7. Also d2d3 c8g4 8. a4b3 f6h5 9. a2a3 f8e8 10. b3a2 d8f6 11. c1g5 f6g6 12. As expected b2b4 c5b6 13. g5h4 h5f4 14. In my opinion g1h1 b8d7 15. g2g3 f4h3 16. d1e2 h7h5 17. Besides a1e1 d6d5 18. To some extent e4d5 c6d5 19. c3d5 e5e4 20. d3e4 e8e4 21. In brief e2e4 f7f5 22. In the past e4e7 g4f3. ---------
Just think of the tragedy of teaching children not to doubt.
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