David Silver

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David Silver [1] David Silver,

a British computer scientist at Google DeepMind, and co-author of AlphaGo and AlphaZero. Before, since 2010, he was researcher at University College London, postdoc at Massachusetts Institute of Technology [2], Ph.D student and postdoc at University of Alberta, and CTO for Elixir Studios and lead programmer on the PC strategy game Republic: the Revolution [3]. His research interests covers simulation-based search, reinforcement learning, and cooperative pathfinding.

See also

Selected Publications

[4] [5] [6]

2006 …

  • David Silver (2006). Cooperative Pathfinding. In AI Game Programming Wisdom 3, pages 99–111. Charles River Media, pdf

2007

2008

  • David Silver, Richard Sutton, Martin Müller (2008). Sample-Based Learning and Search with Permanent and Transient Memories. In Proceedings of the 25th International Conference on Machine Learning, pdf
  • Sylvain Gelly, David Silver (2008). Achieving Master Level Play in 9 x 9 Computer Go. pdf

2009

2010 …

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015 …

2016

2017

2018

2019

2020 …

AlphaGo Zero: Discovering new knowledge by David Silver, YouTube Video

References

  1. David Silver
  2. Research Staff > David Silver
  3. David Silver - Applications
  4. David Silver - Publications
  5. David M. Silver from Microsoft Academic Search
  6. Joel Veness - Publications
  7. Demystifying Deep Reinforcement Learning by Tambet Matiisen, Nervana, December 21, 2015
  8. GitHub - IoannisAntonoglou/optimBench: Benchmark testbed for assessing the performance of optimisation algorithms
  9. Move Evaluation in Go Using Deep Convolutional Neural Networks by Aja Huang, The Computer-go Archives, December 19, 2014
  10. AlphaGo Zero: Learning from scratch by Demis Hassabis and David Silver, DeepMind, October 18, 2017
  11. AlphaZero: Shedding new light on the grand games of chess, shogi and Go by David Silver, Thomas Hubert, Julian Schrittwieser and Demis Hassabis, DeepMind, December 03, 2018
  12. MuZero: Mastering Go, chess, shogi and Atari without rules
  13. David Silver, Gerald Tesauro (2009). Monte-Carlo Simulation Balancing. ICML 2009, pdf

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