CS 188: Artificial Intelligence
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1 CS 188: Artificial Intelligence Adversarial Search Instructor: Stuart Russell University of California, Berkeley
2 Game Playing State-of-the-Art Checkers: 1950: First computer player. 1959: Samuel s self-taught program. 1994: First computer world champion: Chinook ended 40- year-reign of human champion Marion Tinsley using complete 8-piece endgame. 2007: Checkers solved! Endgame database of 39 trillion states Chess: : Zuse, Wiener, Shannon, Turing, Newell & Simon, McCarthy. 1960s onward: gradual improvement under standard model 1997: special-purpose chess machine Deep Blue defeats human champion Gary Kasparov in a six-game match. Deep Blue examined 200M positions per second and extended some lines of search up to 40 ply. Current programs running on a PC rate > 3200 (vs 2870 for Magnus Carlsen). Go: 1968: Zobrist s program plays legal Go, barely (b>300!) : Monte Carlo tree search enables rapid advances: current programs beat strong amateurs, and professionals with a 3-4 stone handicap. Pacman
3 Behavior from Computation [Demo: mystery pacman (L6D1)]
4 Video of Demo Mystery Pacman
5 Types of Games Many different kinds of games! Axes: Deterministic or stochastic? One, two, or more players? Turn-taking or simultaneous? Zero sum? Perfect information (fully observable)? Want algorithms for calculating a contingent plan (a.k.a. strategy or policy) which recommends a move for every possible eventuality
6 Standard Games Standard games are deterministic, observable, turn-taking, two-player, zero-sum Game formulation: Initial state: s 0 Players: Player(s) indicates whose move it is Actions: Actions(s) for player on move Transition model: Result(s,a) Terminal test: Terminal-Test(s) Terminal values: Utility(s,p) for player p Or just Utility(s) for player making the decision at root
7 Zero-Sum Games Zero-Sum Games Agents have opposite utilities Pure competition: One maximizes, the other minimizes General Games Agents have independent utilities Cooperation, indifference, competition, shifting alliances, and more are all possible
8 Adversarial Search
9 Single-Agent Trees
10 Value of a State Value of a state: The best achievable outcome (utility) from that state Non-Terminal States: Terminal States:
11 Tic-Tac-Toe Game Tree
12 Minimax Values MAX nodes: under Agent s Control: MIN nodes: under Opponent s Control: Terminal States:
13 Minimax Implementation What kind of search? Depth-first function minimax-decision(s) returns an action return the action a in Actions(s) with the highest min-value(result(s,a)) function max-value(s) returns a value if Terminal-Test(s) then return Utility(s) initialize v = - for each a in Actions(s): v = max(v, min-value(result(s,a))) return v function min-value(s) returns a value if Terminal-Test(s) then return Utility(s) initialize v = + for each a in Actions(state): v = min(v, max-value(result(s,a)) return v
14 Alternative Implementation function minimax-decision(s) returns an action return the action a in Actions(s) with the highest value(result(s,a)) function value(s) returns a value if Terminal-Test(s) then return Utility(s) if Player(s) = MAX then return max a in Actions(s) value(result(s,a)) if Player(s) = MIN then return min a in Actions(s) value(result(s,a))
15 Minimax Example
16 Minimax Efficiency How efficient is minimax? Just like (exhaustive) DFS Time: O(b m ) Space: O(bm) Example: For chess, b 35, m 100 Exact solution is completely infeasible But, do we need to explore the whole tree?
17 Resource Limits
18 Resource Limits Problem: In realistic games, cannot search to leaves! Solution 1: Bounded lookahead Search only to a preset depth limit or horizon Use an evaluation function for non-terminal positions Guarantee of optimal play is gone More plies make a BIG difference Example: Suppose we have 100 seconds, can explore 10K nodes / sec So can check 1M nodes per move For chess, b=~35 so reaches about depth 4 not so good ???? max min
19 Depth Matters Evaluation functions are always imperfect Deeper search => better play (usually) Or, deeper search gives same quality of play with a less accurate evaluation function An important example of the tradeoff between complexity of features and complexity of computation [Demo: depth limited (L6D4, L6D5)]
20 Video of Demo Limited Depth (2)
21 Video of Demo Limited Depth (10)
22 Evaluation Functions
23 Evaluation Functions Evaluation functions score non-terminals in depth-limited search Ideal function: returns the actual minimax value of the position In practice: typically weighted linear sum of features: EVAL(s) = w 1 f 1 (s) + w 2 f 2 (s) +. + w n f n (s) E.g., w 1 = 9, f 1 (s) = (num white queens num black queens), etc. Terminate search only in quiescent positions, i.e., no major changes expected in feature values
24 Evaluation for Pacman
25 Video of Demo Smart Ghosts (Coordination)
26 Generalized minimax What if the game is not zero-sum, or has multiple players? Generalization of minimax: Terminals have utility tuples Node values are also utility tuples Each player maximizes its own component Can give rise to cooperation and competition dynamically 8,8,1 8,8,1 7,7,2 0,0,7 8,8,1 7,7,2 0,0,8 1,1,6 0,0,7 9,9,0 8,8,1 9,9,0 7,7,2 0,0,8 0,0,7
27 Game Tree Pruning
28 Minimax Example
29 Alpha-Beta Example α = best option so far from any MAX node on this path α =3 α = The order of generation matters: more pruning is possible if good moves come first
30 Alpha-Beta Pruning General case (pruning children of MIN node) We re computing the MIN-VALUE at some node n We re looping over n s children n s estimate of the childrens min is dropping Who cares about n s value? MAX Let α be the best value that MAX can get so far at any choice point along the current path from the root If n becomes worse than α, MAX will avoid it, so we can prune n s other children (it s already bad enough that it won t be played) Pruning children of MAX node is symmetric Let β be the best value that MIN can get so far at any choice point along the current path from the root MAX MIN MAX MIN a n
31 Alpha-Beta Pruning Properties Theorem: This pruning has no effect on minimax value computed for the root! Good child ordering improves effectiveness of pruning Iterative deepening helps with this max With perfect ordering : Time complexity drops to O(b m/2 ) Doubles solvable depth! 1M nodes/move => depth=8, respectable min This is a simple example of metareasoning (computing about what to compute)
32 Alpha-Beta Quiz
33 Alpha-Beta Quiz 2
34 Minimax Revisited a b c Minimax acts as if the leaf values are exact In fact they are estimates with some uncertainty; probably b is a better choice than a
35 Games with uncertain outcomes
36 Chance outcomes in trees Tictactoe, chess Minimax Tetris, investing Expectimax Backgammon, Monopoly Expectiminimax
37 Minimax function decision(s) returns an action return the action a in Actions(s) with the highest value(result(s,a)) function value(s) returns a value if Terminal-Test(s) then return Utility(s) if Player(s) = MAX then return max a in Actions(s) value(result(s,a)) if Player(s) = MIN then return min a in Actions(s) value(result(s,a))
38 Expectiminimax function decision(s) returns an action return the action a in Actions(s) with the highest value(result(s,a)) function value(s) returns a value if Terminal-Test(s) then return Utility(s) if Player(s) = MAX then return max a in Actions(s) value(result(s,a)) if Player(s) = MIN then return min a in Actions(s) value(result(s,a)) if Player(s) = CHANCE then return sum a in Actions(s) Pr(a) * value(result(s,a))
39 Reminder: Expectations The expected value of a random variable is the average, weighted by the probability distribution over outcomes Example: How long to get to the airport? Time: Probability: 20 min 30 min 60 min + + x x x min
40 Expectimax Pseudocode sum a in Action(s) Pr(a) * value(result(s,a)) 1/2 1/3 1/ v = (1/2) (8) + (1/3) (24) + (1/6) (-12) = 10
41 Example: Backgammon Dice rolls increase b: 21 possible rolls with 2 dice Backgammon 20 legal moves Depth 2 = 20 x (21 x 20) 3 = 1.2 x 10 9 As depth increases, probability of reaching a given search node shrinks So usefulness of search is diminished So limiting depth is less damaging But pruning is trickier Historic AI: TDGammon uses depth-2 search + very good evaluation function + reinforcement learning: world-champion level play Image: Wikipedia
42 What Values to Use? x x>y => f(x)>f(y) f(x) = Ax+B where A>0 For worst-case minimax reasoning, evaluation function scale doesn t matter We just want better states to have higher evaluations (get the ordering right) Minimax decisions are invariant with respect to monotonic transformations on values Expectiminimax decisions are invariant with respect to positive affine transformations Expectiminimax evaluation functions have to be aligned with actual win probabilities!
43 Summary Games require decisions when optimality is impossible Bounded-depth search and approximate evaluation functions Games force efficient use of computation Alpha-beta pruning Game playing has produced important research ideas Reinforcement learning (checkers) Iterative deepening (chess) Rational metareasoning (Othello) Monte Carlo tree search (Go) Solution methods for partial-information games in economics (poker) Video games present much greater challenges lots to do! b = , S = , m = 10,000 48
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