![]() ![]() People can also adapt to changes in the rules of the game or structure of the board, says Brenden Lake, who co-directs the Minds, Brains, and Machines Initiative at New York University. "We’re constantly working with missing information about how humans are operating and we very intuitively fill in the gaps.".Hidden information and intentions abound in daily life, even in seemingly simple tasks like helping a partner load the dishwasher or driving a car through a street alongside other drivers.But in the real world, an AI system might see a human do something it's never seen before - and have to reason the goal of the person through common sense.Yes, but: A board game is a "highly controlled and limited setting," says Luca Weihs, a research scientist at the Allen Institute for AI who works on how systems can be physically embodied to control a robot or vehicle. "When it comes to planning against adversaries, games are not only important they are necessary," he says, adding they can provide insights about negotiating and reasoning for business, finance and defense sectors, which the two companies he founded and runs, Strategy Robot and Strategic Machines, focus on.The debate is "a misguided question," says Tuomas Sandholm, a professor at Carnegie Mellon University who has studied game theory for three decades. But others say some of the skills required to win games of strategy could lead to real-world applications. ![]()
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