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Please join us for the next Intelligence Seminar!

Tuesday, November 29, 2011
3:30pm
Gates Building 4303

Host: Burr Settles, for appointments please contact Dana Houston (
[email protected])

Speaker: Gerry Tesauro, IBM Research

Title: How Watson Learns Superhuman Jeopardy! Strategies

Abstract: Major advances in Question Answering technology were needed for
Watson to play Jeopardy! at championship level--the show requires
rapid-fire answers to challenging natural language questions, broad general
knowledge, high precision, and accurate confidence estimates. In addition,
Jeopardy! features four types of decision making carrying great strategic
importance: (1) selecting the next clue when in control of the board; (2)
deciding whether to attempt to buzz in; (3) wagering on Daily Doubles; (4)
wagering in Final Jeopardy. This talk describes how Watson makes the above
decisions using innovative quantitative methods that, in principle,
maximize Watson's overall winning chances. We first describe our
development of faithful simulation models of human contestants and the
Jeopardy! game environment. We then present specific learning/optimization
methods used in each strategy algorithm: these methods span a range of
popular AI research topics, including Bayesian inference, game theory,
Dynamic Programming, Reinforcement Learning, and real-time "rollouts."
Application of these methods yielded superhuman game strategies for Watson
that significantly enhanced its overall competitive record.

Joint work with David Gondek, Jon Lenchner, James Fan, and John Prager

Gerald Tesauro is a Research Staff Member at IBM's TJ Watson Research
Center. He is best known for developing TD-Gammon, a self-teaching neural
network that learned to play backgammon at human world championship level.
He has also worked on theoretical and applied machine learning in a wide
variety of other settings, including multi-agent learning, dimensionality
reduction, computer virus recognition, computer chess (Deep Blue),
intelligent e-commerce agents, and autonomic computing. Dr. Tesauro
received BS and PhD degrees in physics from University of Maryland and
Princeton University, respectively. ****



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George Duncan
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Life must be understood backwards; but... it must be lived forward.
Soren Kierkegaard
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