Superhuman AI for Multiplayer Poker: Difference between revisions

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== Introduction ==
== Introduction ==


For many years, most of the superhuman AI that were built can only beat human players in two-player zero-sum games. These games include checkers, chess, two-player limit poker, Go, and two-player no-limit poker. The most common strategy that the AI use to beat those games is to find the most optimal Nash equilibrium. A Nash equilibrium is the best possible choice that a player can take, regardless of what their opponent is going to choose. Nash equilibrium has been proven to always exists in all finite games, and the challenge is to find the equilibrium. To summarize, Nash equilibrium is the best possible strategy and is unbeatable in two-player zero-sum games, since it guarantees to not lose in expectation regardless what the opponent is doing.
In the past two decades, most of the superhuman AI that were built can only beat human players in two-player zero-sum games. More specifically, in the game of poker we only have AI models that can beat them in two-player settings. Poker is a great challenge in AI and game theory because it captures the challenges in hidden information so elegantly. This means that developing a superhuman AI in multiplayer poker is the remaining great milestone in this field. In this paper, the AI whom we call Pluribus, is capable of defeating human professional poker players in Texas hold'em poker which is a six-player poker game and is the most commonly played format in the world.
 
This means that developing a superhuman AI in a multiplayer setting is the remaining great milestone in this field. In this paper, the AI whom we call Pluribus, is capable of defeating human professional poker players in Texas hold'em poker which is a six-player poker game and is the most commonly played format in the world.


== Previous Work ==
== Previous Work ==

Revision as of 13:08, 14 November 2020

Presented by

Hansa Halim, Sanjana Rajendra Naik, Samka Marfua, Shawrupa Proshasty

Introduction

In the past two decades, most of the superhuman AI that were built can only beat human players in two-player zero-sum games. More specifically, in the game of poker we only have AI models that can beat them in two-player settings. Poker is a great challenge in AI and game theory because it captures the challenges in hidden information so elegantly. This means that developing a superhuman AI in multiplayer poker is the remaining great milestone in this field. In this paper, the AI whom we call Pluribus, is capable of defeating human professional poker players in Texas hold'em poker which is a six-player poker game and is the most commonly played format in the world.

Previous Work

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Layer for Processing Missing Data

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Theoretical Analysis

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Experimental Results

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Discussion

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Conclusion

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Critiques

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References

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