ShardPhoenix comments on [LINK] Deep Learning Machine Teaches Itself Chess in 72 Hours - Less Wrong Discussion
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But how much of its performance comes from the neural network learning some non-trivial evaluation function and how much comes from brute-forcing the game tree on a modern computer?
If the neural network was replaced by a trivial heuristic, say, material balance, how would the engine perform?
In the paper they start with just material balance - then via the learning process, their score on the evaluation test goes from "worse than all hand-written chess engines" to "better than all except the very best one" (and the best one, while more hand-crafted, also uses some ML/statistical tuning of numeric params, and has had a lot more effort put into it).
The reason why the NN solution currently doesn't do as well in real games is because it's slower to evaluate and therefore can't brute-force as far.