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Computer Chess
- 1st Edition - June 25, 2014
- Author: Monroe Newborn
- Editor: Thomas A. Standish
- Language: English
- Paperback ISBN:9 7 8 - 1 - 4 8 3 2 - 0 5 4 7 - 2
- eBook ISBN:9 7 8 - 1 - 4 8 3 2 - 1 8 9 0 - 8
Computer Chess deals with the history of computer chess games and the programming of computer chess. Topics covered include chess programs such as the one initiated by Richard… Read more
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Request a sales quoteComputer Chess deals with the history of computer chess games and the programming of computer chess. Topics covered include chess programs such as the one initiated by Richard Greenblatt and those launched by the United States and the USSR in 1966-1967. The United States Computer Chess Championships from 1970 to 1973 are also discussed. Comprised of 10 chapters, this book begins with a historical overview of the basic ideas underlying computer chess and several of the earliest computer games. The next chapter deals with the chess match held in 1966 pitting the Kotok-McCarthy Chess Program of the United States and the ITEP (Institute of Theoretical and Experimental Physics) Chess Program of the Soviet Union. The reader is then introduced to Greenblatt's program, named Mac Hack Six, the first chess program to compete respectably against humans in tournament play. Subsequent chapters focus on the U.S. Computer Chess Championships, from its first edition in New York in 1970 to the fourth, held in Atlanta in 1973. Russia's chess program called KAISSA, an improved version of the ITEP Chess Program, is also described. The final chapter is devoted to OSTRICH, a chess-playing program written by George Arnold in the Digital Computer Laboratory of Columbia University's Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science in 1971. This monograph will be of value to computer science and those interested in computer chess programs and in the broader field of artificial intelligence.
PrefaceAcknowledgmentsChapter I. Introduction ReferencesChapter II. The History and Basic Ideas of Computer Chess Shannon's Contribution Turing and a Hand Simulation of a Chess Program The Los Alamos Chess Program (1957) The Bernstein Chess Program (1958) The Work of Newell, Shaw, and Simon (1958) The Alpha-Beta Algorithm ReferencesChapter III. The Kotok-McCarthy Chess Program (USA) versus the ITEP Chess Program (USSR) (1966-1967) ReferencesChapter IV. The Greenblatt Chess Program (1967) ReferencesChapter V. The First United States Computer Chess Championship (New York, 1970) The Tournament Brief Description of Programs ReferencesChapter VI. The Second United States Computer Chess Championship (Chicago, 1971) The Tournament ReferencesChapter VII. The Third United States Computer Chess Championship (Boston, 1972) The Tournament ReferencesChapter VIII. KAISSA (1972) ReferencesChapter IX. The Fourth United States Computer Chess Championship (Atlanta, 1973) The Tournament ReferencesChapter X. OSTRICH: A Description of a Chess-Playing Program A. Introduction B. Program Environment and Language C. Program Organization and Data Structures D. The Tree Size E. Processing at Each Node F. Nonterminal Node Processing G. Processing at Terminal Nodes H. The Gamma AlgorithmAppendix I. The First World Computer Chess Championship (Stockholm, 1974) ReferencesAppendix II. Basic Data on Computers Involved in Computer Chess GamesAppendix III. Rules Used in the Fourth United States Computer Chess ChampionshipIndex
- No. of pages: 214
- Language: English
- Edition: 1
- Published: June 25, 2014
- Imprint: Academic Press
- Paperback ISBN: 9781483205472
- eBook ISBN: 9781483218908