Well, at its esence a computer is an universal Turing Machine. If you organize the program as a neural network or as a MC algorithm is just cosmetics.
You can see the circuits of your computer as neurons simulating a Von Neumann architecture that is simulating a neural network or a MC or whatever. An may be your whatever is simulating another thing. 2009/11/2 Álvaro Begué <alvaro.be...@gmail.com> > On Sun, Nov 1, 2009 at 7:50 PM, Aldric Giacomoni <ald...@trevoke.net> > wrote: > > Álvaro Begué wrote: > >> 2009/10/31 <compgo...@aol.com>: > >>> Present day MC Go programs are neural networks. The playout is the > trainng > >>> process. > >> > >> What? > >> _______________________________________________ > >> computer-go mailing list > >> computer-go@computer-go.org > >> http://www.computer-go.org/mailman/listinfo/computer-go/ > > > > Go programs using the Monte-Carlo algorithms are neural networks. The > actual > > fact of playing games is what trains them to play better. > > > > ... I'm pretty sure that's what it means, anyway. > > Except they don't fit any definition of "neural network" that I've > been able to find. For starters, they don't have neurons. > _______________________________________________ > computer-go mailing list > computer-go@computer-go.org > http://www.computer-go.org/mailman/listinfo/computer-go/ >
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