Fuego
wins
gold
on 9x9 and
silver
on 19x19
at the 14th Computer Games Olympiad in Pamplona, Spain.
(May 18, 2009)
Mike Smith won the gold medal of Computer Billiards
tournament again in the
11th Computer Olympiad, held in Turin, Italy.
(July 1, 2006)
In the
10th Computer Olympiad in Taiwan, Mike Smith won the gold medal in the Computer Billiards
tournament. (September 9, 2005)
The University of Alberta
checkers project has won the International
Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence (
IJCAI) 2005 Distinguished
Paper Award. The paper, entitled "Solving Checkers", by Jonathan
Schaeffer, Yngvi Bjornsson, Neil Burch, Akihiro Kishimoto, Martin
Müller, Robert Lake, Paul Lu and Steve Sutphen, was one of three
papers to be awarded the honour (from over 1500 submission).
(May 29, 2005)
In January 2005, the first milestone in solving the game of
checkers was achieved.
The infamous
White Doctor
opening has been proven to be a draw.
(January 18, 2005)
New Scientist, "The
World's No.1 Science & Technology Magazine", has a feature article
on the U of A Computer Poker Research Group in their 2003 year-end
double issue (pages 64-68).
(January 7, 2004)
In the
8th Computer
Olympiad,
the U of A GAMES group won a medal in almost every game it participated
in:
Vexbot and
Sparbot developed by the Computer Poker Research Group
took both gold and silver medals in Poker,
NeuroGo by Markus Enzenberger won a silver medal in 9x9 Go, and
so did
Mongoose by Ryan Hayward's team
in Hex, and
ISShogi by Akihiro Kishimoto and his colleagues in
Shogi.
(November 27, 2003)
The University of Alberta
Computer Poker Research Group has won the
International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence
(IJCAI) 2003 Distinguished Paper Award. The paper, entitled
Approximating Game-Theoretic Optimal Strategies for Full-scale Poker ,
by
Darse Billings,
Neil Burch,
Aaron Davidson,
Terence Schauenberg,
Robert Holte,
Jonathan Schaeffer, and
Duane Szafron,
was one of two papers to be awarded the honour.
(Aug 9, 2003)
Isshogi, developed by
Yasushi Tanase, Norifumi Gotou, and
Akihiro Kishimoto
won the 13th World Computer Shogi Championship.
Isshogi won with a score of 6-1 on a
tiebreak ahead of
YSS. More information is available at the
website.
(May 5, 2003)
Isshogi, developed by
Akihiro Kishimoto and his colleagues,
won the Computer Shogi Championship in the 2nd International Shogi Forum. The program
shared the title with another program,
YSS, authored by Hiroshi
Yamashita. More information
is available at the forum
website.
(Oct 25, 2002)
The 3rd International Conference on Computers and Games
(
CG'2002),
the two workshop on Game Informatics and Agents in Computer Games,
and the
21st
Century Championship Cup and Trading Agent Competition
(
TAC 2002)
were successfully completed.
(Aug 6, 2002)
Akihiro Kishimoto and Jonathan Schaeffer's paper
Transposition Table
Driven Work Scheduling in Distributed Game-Tree Search was
awarded the Best Paper Prize at the Fifteenth Canadian Conference on
Artificial Intelligence (
AI'2002).
(July 28, 2002)
The
3rd International Conference on Computers and Games
(
CG'2002) was held
July 25-27, 2002 at the University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada.
Yngvi Bjornsson's Line of Action program
YL
has defended its gold medal at the
Seventh Computer Olympiad, held in Maastrict, The Netherlands. It is the third time
the program has won the title.
Mona, the
2001 E-mail World Champion, did not compete.
For more information, please view the
game results.
(July 9, 2002)
The game of
Awari has been
solved, by John Romein and Henri Bal at the Free University in Amsterdam,
Netherlands. With perfect play,
Awari is a draw.
(July 2, 2002)