Monday, February 14, 2011

Human-Cyborg Matchup on Jeopardy: Ken Jennings vs. The Supercomputer

Kathy Ceceri  - Monday night starts the long-awaited double-header between two of Jeopardy’s best players ever — Ken Jennings and Brad Rutter — and a machine — the IBM Watson supercomputer. The grand prize for the two matches, which will be shown over three days, is $1 million. Second place gets $300,000 and third place $200,000, with part of the winnings going to charity.

According to the Jeopardy website, the challenge in creating Watson was to design a computing system that could answer questions posed in everyday English, including all the riddles, irony and word play typical of a Jeopardy game. Watson will be facing Jennings, who won a record-setting 74 consecutive games during the 2004-2005 season, and Rutter, an undefeated champion who earned the highest cumulative amount ever by a single Jeopardy player, $3,255,102.

IBM’s team helped Watson train by setting up more than 50 “sparring games” against former Jeopardy Tournament of Champions contestants. And Watson had to undergo the same Jeopardy contestant test that humans take to qualify to play on the show, although there is no word on how Watson would have fared in the interview part of the audition. ...

You can find out more about Watson by going to the IBM website and by watching the PBS NOVA special called The Smartest Machine on Earth....







via Human-Cyborg Matchup on Jeopardy: Ken Jennings vs. The Supercomputer | GeekDad | Wired.com.

1 comment:

Cole said...

I watched the first episode tonight. It's close. I absolutely love this concept. I have many friends that say that it's bad if the computer wins because it is a victory against human thought. I argue the opposite, that Watson's victory would be a victory for human engineering and innovation. Plus, winning or loosing Jeopardy doesn't matter, the real test is how well it can interpret the clues.