Deep Mind Founder (Alpha Go Zero Inventor) Supports Chess In Schools

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  • Deep Mind Founder (Alpha Go Zero Inventor) Supports Chess In Schools

    Here is a great article about the man who's company developed Alpha Go Zero that is considered by many to be at least a decade ahead of it's time.
    http://en.chessbase.com/post/deepmin...vates-children

  • #2
    Deep Mind Founder (Alpha Go Zero Inventor) Supports Chess In Schools

    November 30, 2020

    London A.I. Lab Claims Breakthrough That Could Accelerate Drug Discovery

    Researchers at DeepMind say they have solved “the protein folding problem,” a task that has bedeviled scientists for more than 50 years.

    By Cade Metz

    Some scientists spend their lives trying to pinpoint the shape of tiny proteins in the human body.

    Proteins are the microscopic mechanisms that drive the behavior of viruses, bacteria, the human body and all living things. They begin as strings of chemical compounds, before twisting and folding into three-dimensional shapes that define what they can do — and what they cannot.

    For biologists, identifying the precise shape of a protein often requires months, years or even decades of experimentation. It requires skill, intelligence and more than a little elbow grease. Sometimes they never succeed.

    Now, an artificial intelligence lab in London has built a computer system that can do the job in a few hours — perhaps even a few minutes.

    DeepMind, a lab owned by the same parent company as Google, said on Monday that its system, called AlphaFold, had solved what is known as “the protein folding problem.” Given the string of amino acids that make up a protein, the system can rapidly and reliably predict its three-dimensional shape.

    This long-sought breakthrough could accelerate the ability to understand diseases, develop new medicines and unlock mysteries of the human body.

    Computer scientists have struggled to build such a system for more than 50 years. For the last 25, they have measured and compared their efforts through a global competition called the Critical Assessment of Structure Prediction, or C.A.S.P. Until now, no contestant had even come close to solving the problem.

    DeepMind solved the problem with a wide range of proteins, reaching an accuracy level that rivaled physical experiments. Many scientists had assumed that moment was still years, if not decades, away.

    “I always hoped I would live to see this day,” said John Moult, a professor at the University of Maryland who helped create C.A.S.P. in 1994 and continues to oversee the biennial contest. “But it wasn’t always obvious I was going to make it.”

    As part of this year’s C.A.S.P., DeepMind’s technology was reviewed by Dr. Moult and other researchers who oversee the contest.

    The whole article is in the NYT but might be behind a paywall for some.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/30/t...gtype=Homepage

    See also:

    AlphaZero

    https://forum.chesstalk.com/forum/ch...ike#post196897

    Chess Mastered with a Self-Play Algorithm

    https://forum.chesstalk.com/forum/ch...thm#post181386

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