On 17/02/19 23:24, Hiroshi Yamashita wrote:
> Hi Ingo,
>
>> * How strong is the new ELF bot in comparison with Leela-Zero?
>
> from CGOS BayesElo, new ELF(ELFv2) is about +100 stronger than Leela-Zero.
We ran a test match and ELFv2 lost 34 - 62 against LZ-204 at 1600 visits
each, so that's
Dear Hiroshi,
thanks a lot for your explanation!
Best regards, Ingo.
> Gesendet: Sonntag, 17. Februar 2019 um 23:24 Uhr
> Von: "Hiroshi Yamashita"
> An: computer-go@computer-go.org
> Betreff: Re: [Computer-go] A new ELF OpenGo bot and analysis of historical Go
> games
>
> Hi Ingo,
>
> > *
Hi Ingo,
* How strong is the new ELF bot in comparison with Leela-Zero?
from CGOS BayesElo, new ELF(ELFv2) is about +100 stronger than Leela-Zero.
Rating Network size(Resnet layers x filters)
LZ_05db_ELFv2_p800 355420x256
LZ_d13c_ELFv1_p800 3530
"The sudden overall increase in agreement in 2016 also reinforces the
belief that the introduction of powerful AI opponents has boosted the
skills of professional players. That apparent correlation isn't
conclusive — it's possible that humans have gotten markedly better for
some other reason — but
And most important:
* Does ELF know the meaning of life?
On 16/02/2019 17:29, "Ingo Althöfer" wrote:
Hi Remi,
thanks you for the link.
A few questions (to all who know something):
* How strong is the new ELF bot in comparison with Leela-Zero?
* How were komi values taken into account
Hi Remi,
thanks you for the link.
A few questions (to all who know something):
* How strong is the new ELF bot in comparison with Leela-Zero?
* How were komi values taken into account when analysing old go games with help
of ELF?
* How often does ELF propose moves played by AlphaGo (for
Hi,
I have just discovered that interesting Facebook blog post, in case anybody
else missed it:
https://ai.facebook.com/blog/open-sourcing-new-elf-opengo-bot-and-go-research/
Rémi
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