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How Greg Lindsay Beat IBM's Watson at Jeopardy

47 pointsby fakelvisover 14 years ago

7 comments

ughover 14 years ago
This is also mentioned in the article but I think it is worth mentioning again: Those games were played a year ago. That’s a long, long time ago. IBM started building Watson (obviously not completely from scratch but as a Jeopardy contestant) only four years ago.<p>All those games Watson played during the last year were played with the express purpose of improving Watson.
grandpaover 14 years ago
Even if Watson doesn't win, the fact that strong players think of him as a worthy opponent is a huge step forward for the popular perception of AI.
zckover 14 years ago
&#62;So I had to steer him into categories full of what I called "semantic difficulty"--where the clues’ wordplay would trip him up.<p>This doesn't seem as useful as it's written here -- it's only useful under two cases: 1. Not all the clues are chosen before time runs out. 2. The money you gain here is wagered on a Daily Double, or the money Watson loses here is not able to be wagered on the Daily Double.<p>Contestants aren't able to make up categories, to create ones that would cause Watson trouble; they have to pick from the six on the board.
jazzybover 14 years ago
After having watched the first half of game one: Another interesting category that Watson seemed to have a lot of trouble with was a category where all the answers were decades (1910s, 1920s, etc.). The top answers that Watson came up with were always years, but he was never that confident, and he never caught on that the answers were supposed to be a <i>span</i> of years.
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adestefanover 14 years ago
The first thing I noticed last night was Watson's strategy of sweeping the questions across instead of down like is normally played. My instinct tells me that humans get more context out of the category name and feel comfortable sticking to one category at a time.
roel_vover 14 years ago
If this machine is already so good, why doesn't IBM offer a system based on it? (honest question, not suggesting it's not good) It could decimate library research work, or legal research, by providing high-quality suggestions for simple phrases.
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zipdogover 14 years ago
I wouldn't be surprised if Watson leaves the contestants in tears this time - not because of some sadness at losing to a machine, but the sheer intellectual drain of a large number of very quick decisions based on intuition - which is what I guess it will take to beat the machine.
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