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| Tags: capa, chess, cuz, greatest, karpov, kasparov, kramnik, lie, order, players, puters |
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#31
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On Apr 26, 6:24 pm, "David Kane" wrote:
"raylopez99" wrote in message oups.com... So, understanding how chess works, and how chess playing computers work, and having seen Crafty evaluate pretty good myself, I have to side with the original article. I would not go so far as to say that I side with the original argument, only that Riis' objections were groundless. I agree Riis' objections were groundless. In fact, the original authors have done some groundbreaking work on developing a methodology to rate chess players. It is, at the very least, very interesting, and a refreshing change from the pseudo-science historical ELO/chessmetrics stuff. If you have a moment kindly articulate what you mean by pseudo- science. I like Sonas' work, which has been used by the PGA (defunct GM association). What I am aware of is that (from memory) it seems Sonas rates players from different rating pools (which Sonas acknowledges is faulty), that is to say from different time periods, when in fact as Arpad Elo pointed out, as time progresses the rating pool as a whole gets stronger. Also Sonas apparently (from reading some of these threads) makes assumptions such as a player who plays infrequently should gain or lose a different number of Elo points than a player who plays regularly. What other 'pseudo-science' (which I take to be what you feel are defects) are you referring to? The problem with the work is that it applies a new method to a very hard problem (ranking world champions) when they haven't even shown the method's worth when applied to easy problems (ranking everybody else). Ranking everybody else meaning what? If the players compete regularly against one another, the Elo Gaussian distribution seems a good way of ranking to me. BTW I've seen Arpad Elo's scheme even applied to rank world football (soccer) teams, and it's surprising how well the system seems to work (Brazil was #1, as expected, and the other familiar winners were in the top 10, even Greece, which won the Euro Championships in 2004 and were considered a 'surprise team', in fact was ranked at the time in the top 10 by this system, so the 2004 championship wasn't quite that big an upset, not unlike Euwe's victory over Alekhine was not that big an upset because in fact Euwe was quite a good player, albeit obscure). I have previously expressed belief in the theory that "move rating" will eventually surpass "result rating" as the gold standard measurement of chess skill. This is a small first step, but there is much work left to do. Agreed, though I doubt move rating will eventually surpass 'result rating' anytime soon, unless we develop a very powerful PC (which is possible) and/or a quantum computer that can instantly solve the entire chess tree to give a 'perfect' verdict on every move (i.e., the move, with perfect play will end in victory, defeat or a draw). RL |
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#32
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Then you conceed my point and indeed the point of Crafty rating chess
players. OK, now if I used Crafty for analysis of Fritz or Rybka games, it would certainly not agree and would often call their moves 'errors' even though they are FAR stronger than crafty. To properly analyze the world champions you would need to use a program that is atleast equal in strength to these champions. Crippled Crafty just doesn't cut it... now if they used Rybka for analysis I wouldn't have any problem with the study. J.Lohner |
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#33
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On Apr 27, 7:54 am, David Richerby
wrote: help bot wrote: A silly statement. As we saw, the wild, attacking style of GK gave GM Karpov a very hard time, except for their very first match. How was GM Tal, in his prime, all that different from GM Kasparov? Tal sacrificed for the attack; Kasparov sacrificed for the initiative, according to somebody I read. They say there's a fine line between love and hate, but *this* is really splitting hairs. Obviously, the road to attack is paved with stones bearing the label: "gain the initiative". Tal and Kasparov were dramatically different in style. Quite apart from anything else, Kasparov's play is much more sound than Tal's. Perhaps. But I know of one game where GM Kasparov sacked an entire Rook for nothing more than a few spite checks -- and this is about as unsound as it gets with these guys. And that game was hardly an exception, apart from the rarity of winning a full Rook down at that level despite the idiotic attack. Of course, Tal's play was sound enough to win in many cases; who needs to be more sound than that? It depends mainly on whom you are playing. For instance, against DeepFritz, it would be wise to refrain from unsound sacrifices altogether. Another example was the cool, calm, collected Bobby Fischer, who was overwhelmed by GM Tal in his prime You mean the +4-2=5 career record Lapsing beyond well GM Tal's prime now, and into GM Fischer's. In between there were, I believe, three other world champions. (excluding the two blitzgames at Herzeg Novi, which were both won by Fischer and which were ten years after the rest of the games) in Tal's favour? No, I was talking about GM Tal's prime, just as I wrote. The year 1959 leaps to mind. [GM Fischer] calmly observed after the fact that GM Tal's hyper-aggressive play was "unsound". Tal never claimed to be sound. Who cares? You are beginning to sound like Taylor Kingston, who wishes to substitute mere hearsay for hard evidence. As I see it, it makes no difference what GM Tal said; he either was, or he wasn't, sound; and on top of this, he is to be disqualified on the basis of knowing himself personally. He just claimed to be sound enough to be very difficult to beat over the board. This is immaterial to what I was talking about, although it might prove relevant to a discussion of GM Tal's humility. -- help bot |
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#34
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"raylopez99" wrote in message oups.com... On Apr 26, 6:24 pm, "David Kane" wrote: "raylopez99" wrote in message oups.com... So, understanding how chess works, and how chess playing computers work, and having seen Crafty evaluate pretty good myself, I have to side with the original article. I would not go so far as to say that I side with the original argument, only that Riis' objections were groundless. I agree Riis' objections were groundless. In fact, the original authors have done some groundbreaking work on developing a methodology to rate chess players. It is, at the very least, very interesting, and a refreshing change from the pseudo-science historical ELO/chessmetrics stuff. If you have a moment kindly articulate what you mean by pseudo- science. I like Sonas' work, which has been used by the PGA (defunct GM association). What I am aware of is that (from memory) it seems Sonas rates players from different rating pools (which Sonas acknowledges is faulty), that is to say from different time periods, when in fact as Arpad Elo pointed out, as time progresses the rating pool as a whole gets stronger. Also Sonas apparently (from reading some of these threads) makes assumptions such as a player who plays infrequently should gain or lose a different number of Elo points than a player who plays regularly. What other 'pseudo-science' (which I take to be what you feel are defects) are you referring to? ELOs methodology was designed for a certain set of conditions (playing actively in a pool) but is applied under conditions way outside of those conditions. The issue is whether those extrapolations are supported by any evidence. The problem with the work is that it applies a new method to a very hard problem (ranking world champions) when they haven't even shown the method's worth when applied to easy problems (ranking everybody else). Ranking everybody else meaning what? If the players compete regularly against one another, the Elo Gaussian distribution seems a good way of ranking to me. That is a big if. Look at actual ratings lists and you will find: 1. That they contain a very small number of players compared to the total number of chess players 2. Many of the players in the list have very few games 3. Many are based on old results. The proposed method should be confirmed by applying it to problems where we know what the answer should be. I.e. first determine a general relationship between moves and wins, and *then* apply it to a hard problem (like ranking world champions). BTW I've seen Arpad Elo's scheme even applied to rank world football (soccer) teams, and it's surprising how well the system seems to work (Brazil was #1, as expected, and the other familiar winners were in the top 10, even Greece, which won the Euro Championships in 2004 and were considered a 'surprise team', in fact was ranked at the time in the top 10 by this system, so the 2004 championship wasn't quite that big an upset, not unlike Euwe's victory over Alekhine was not that big an upset because in fact Euwe was quite a good player, albeit obscure). I'm not familiar with the soccer ratings which you speak of, but many ratings of this form consider factors *other* than the result. Famously, statisticians have analyzed in great detail what wins games in major league baseball. While certainly results tell us something, it is absurd to think that W/L results are the *only* things with predictive value. I have previously expressed belief in the theory that "move rating" will eventually surpass "result rating" as the gold standard measurement of chess skill. This is a small first step, but there is much work left to do. Agreed, though I doubt move rating will eventually surpass 'result rating' anytime soon, unless we develop a very powerful PC (which is possible) and/or a quantum computer that can instantly solve the entire chess tree to give a 'perfect' verdict on every move (i.e., the move, with perfect play will end in victory, defeat or a draw). This is not at all necessary. Most people conveniently overlook that, in practice, the conditions required for ELO rating are rarely met. Move rating becomes useful when its errors are smaller than those already present in result rating. The key advantage of move rating is that you get much more information per game, so in theory get better ratings faster. |
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#35
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On Apr 27, 2:49 pm, "Inconnux" wrote:
Then you conceed my point and indeed the point of Crafty rating chess players. OK, now if I used Crafty for analysis of Fritz or Rybka games, it would certainly not agree and would often call their moves 'errors' even though they are FAR stronger than crafty. To properly analyze the world champions you would need to use a program that is atleast equal in strength to these champions. Crippled Crafty just doesn't cut it... now if they used Rybka for analysis I wouldn't have any problem with the study. J.Lohner Not true at all. Crafty could easily tell you which programs far stronger than itself played the most perfect chess. This is not debatable. For instance, the winning program between two chess programs playing each other by definition will produce at least one less error than the losing program--and Crafty could, at some point, appreciate this. The only way you can get around your erroneous statement is to qualify "properly" in "properly analyze". If you mean that it is better to have an even stronger chess program than Crafty to better ("properly") rate the champions, of course you're right and nobody would disagree with you. But that doesn't mean Crafty's efforts are of no value. Perhaps with a 'properly' written program you might have, in a close tie, a switch between two players say tied for fifth place in the pantheon of all-time champions RL |
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#36
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On Apr 28, 2:17 am, "David Kane" wrote:
"raylopez99" wrote in message Thanks David Kane. My speculation about what you thought was bogus about the current Elo rating was then largely correct--seems like it's the sample size being too small--for a moment I thought you had some other special insight and/or were a crank. I still find ELO quite useful when done in a normal distribution--play more games, and you lower the error rate. Of course if you don't play often then you can have an erroneous rating. BTW here is the list of soccer (football) ELO ranked champions: http://www.eloratings.net/world.html RL |
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#37
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raylopez99 wrote:
Goodbye, duffer. Oh. Well, if you put it like that, goodbye. Dave. -- David Richerby Swiss Apple (TM): it's like a tasty www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~davidr/ fruit but it's made in Switzerland! |
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#38
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"raylopez99" wrote in message oups.com... On Apr 28, 2:17 am, "David Kane" wrote: "raylopez99" wrote in message Thanks David Kane. My speculation about what you thought was bogus about the current Elo rating was then largely correct--seems like it's the sample size being too small--for a moment I thought you had some other special insight and/or were a crank. I still find ELO quite useful when done in a normal distribution--play more games, and you lower the error rate. Of course if you don't play often then you can have an erroneous rating. BTW here is the list of soccer (football) ELO ranked champions: http://www.eloratings.net/world.html RL You will note that this rating system is a modified ELO system that considers the score as well as the result. In principle,a system that truly rated the moves wouldn't have to use the result at all. For example, if a 1900 played like a 1700 but beat a 1300 playing like a 1500, then the winner would lose points and the loser would gain them! Of course, some hybrid such as that used in soccer could also have merit. |
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#39
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On Apr 28, 8:45 am, David Richerby
wrote: raylopez99 wrote: Goodbye, duffer. Oh. Well, if you put it like that, goodbye. Dave. -- David Richerby Swiss Apple (TM): it's like a tastywww.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~davidr/ fruit but it's made in Switzerland! Geez, don't be so sensitive, I was only flaming you. RL |
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#40
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On Apr 28, 10:42 am, "David Kane" wrote:
"raylopez99" wrote in message oups.com... On Apr 28, 2:17 am, "David Kane" wrote: "raylopez99" wrote in message Thanks David Kane. My speculation about what you thought was bogus about the current Elo rating was then largely correct--seems like it's the sample size being too small--for a moment I thought you had some other special insight and/or were a crank. I still find ELO quite useful when done in a normal distribution--play more games, and you lower the error rate. Of course if you don't play often then you can have an erroneous rating. BTW here is the list of soccer (football) ELO ranked champions: http://www.eloratings.net/world.html RL You will note that this rating system is a modified ELO system that considers the score as well as the result. In principle,a system that truly rated the moves wouldn't have to use the result at all. For example, if a 1900 played like a 1700 but beat a 1300 playing like a 1500, then the winner would lose points and the loser would gain them! Of course, some hybrid such as that used in soccer could also have merit.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Interesting, now I see where you're going. So, to further amplify, if you fail to find the best move possible and, in a mating net, fail to mate your opponent in the most efficient manner possible, you could in theory lose points or not win as many points as somebody who mates in X moves, as opposed to mating in 2X moves. I suppose this is analogous to losing Elo points if you fail to win, but only draw, against an opponent who is much weaker than you. RL |
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