IBM computer takes on Jeopardy

desertdawg

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The computer "Watson" is tied for the lead with Brad Rutter at $5,000. Jennings is in the back at $2,000. Watch and see if Jennings and Rutter are hitting the button before they even read the question, it's the only way to hang with that computer's speed on the buzzer. :)
 
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azsportsfan01

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The computer "Watson" is tied for the lead with Brad Rutter at $5,000. Jennings is in the back at $2,000. Watch and see if Jennings and Rutter are hitting the button before they even read the question, it's the only way to hang with that computer's speed on the buzzer. :)

I think I've read that you actually get penalized for trying to buzz in too early. It is all about being the first guy/gal to ring in once the last word is read. That said the computer is kicking some major ass.
 

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Some observations from watching the Science channel special and the three Jeopardy episodes:

Watson had two great advantages: access to vast amounts of information and extreme processing speed to parse it all. Given that, I don't think its performance was all that impressive and certainly not surprising. At the heart of the software is simply looking up keywords from the question and finding what other keywords pop up in the resulting documents most frequently that might correspond to answers. Now, identifying the keywords and figuring out what subject the answer should be (person, title, etc) is no easy task and they did use some machine learning techniques (I wonder which?) to train the computer to find patterns using old questions. That's neat, but not exactly revolutionary. Machine learning using neural networks, genetic algorithms, etc. have been around for decades. And even without training, I think Watson would do fairly well on some of the simpler questions (the ones with lots of obvious keywords).

It was easy to tell right away which questions it would have no problem with and which questions would be problematic. And despite all the training, it still struggled with some of the categories or unusually phrased questions. The US city with the airports is a good example. How do you look that up? The key there was to associate the two airports with the war hero/battle (using "named after" which is a problematic key phrase) and then to associate the two airports with the city they were in. All that requires some substantial logic.

But the computer won not because it could find a lot of the answers, but because it could find them faster than a human could read and understand the question, recall the answer, and press the buzzer. And that is directly related to its parallel processing power. Had they put even more processors in there, it would have probably won by even a wider margin.
 
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arthurracoon

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http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20110216-719076.html
IBM Moving Watson Supercomputer Beyond 'Jeopardy' To Health-Care

After trouncing "Jeopardy!'s" best and brightest, International Business Machines Corp.'s (IBM) Watson supercomputer is on to a new challenge--health-care.

IBM said it has reached a research agreement with Nuance Communications Inc. (NUAN), a provider of speech-recognition technology, to "explore, develop and commercialize" the Watson computing system's advanced analytics capabilities in the health-care industry.

Columbia University Medical Center and the University of Maryland School of Medicine will be providing their medical expertise and research.

......
 

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Pretty cool, "Watson" jumped out to a early lead but Jennings and the other dude are buzzing in quicker now, even if they haven't read the question. Trippy.

That apparently turned out to be one of the keys. you can't buzz in early it locks you out, but the human reaction time was slower than Watson so even when they knew the right questions, they often got beat to the punch by Watson.

But then that's apparently a huge part of the strategy anyways, people that played Jennings during his streak were trying to buzz in early too for the same reason.
 

desertdawg

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That apparently turned out to be one of the keys. you can't buzz in early it locks you out, but the human reaction time was slower than Watson so even when they knew the right questions, they often got beat to the punch by Watson.

But then that's apparently a huge part of the strategy anyways, people that played Jennings during his streak were trying to buzz in early too for the same reason.
Yamon I totally remember that, I love it when the contestants act like it's broken, waving it around and shaking the buzzer. "Watson" seemed to have most of the answers to the information he could process, and he had first dibs with the timing. Jeopardy is my favorite show, I am so over "Watson" right now. Now they start the teen week today, which usually makes me feel semi-genius or really dumb. :)
 
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MigratingOsprey

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I've been in some of these quiz bowl type competitions and buzzer strategy is definitely huge

A lot of times if you are confident in a categoy and the early part of the question you really prepare to jam in on the buzzer ... you have a little bit of time (the actual buzzing, being called on and a bried pause moment) to get your answer formed and ready

you don't really need to have the answer in your mind and then buzz

I wonder if they built in some lag on this - especially given the processing speeds, a 10 second lag could give a computer a long time to process information
 

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they start the teen week today, which usually makes me feel semi-genius or really dumb. :)

I aced the "Disneyland Rides" category. :thumbup:

When Jeopardy was first on, with Art Flemming as host - Dark Ages, you could ring in as soon as the clue was unveiled. IMO you had to know your stuff more back then. Since people often hadn't had time to read the entire clue they were betting that they'd know the answer whatever the question was. (That is, know the question whatever the answer was.) Or look like a total idiot as they stood there with a blank look on their face. IMO it had more of an edge to it back then.
 

TheHopToad

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When Jeopardy was first on, with Art Flemming as host - Dark Ages, you could ring in as soon as the clue was unveiled. IMO you had to know your stuff more back then. Since people often hadn't had time to read the entire clue they were betting that they'd know the answer whatever the question was. (That is, know the question whatever the answer was.) Or look like a total idiot as they stood there with a blank look on their face. IMO it had more of an edge to it back then.
Glad I'm not the only one here who remembers the Art Flemming years. I agree, it's more exciting whan they can buzz in halfway through the question. Puts more pressure on them.

 
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