Here you have a Neighbor-Joining analysis of the data. Clearly, similarities are not related to strength, otherwise the type of tree you will obtain will be completely different (almost linear). How significant is this tree? it will be necessary to do a bootstrap analysis, or repeat the same experiment with different positions. In other words, if the analysis after random re-sampling of the data keeps giving the same type of tree, it will be very significant. That would indicate that the most similar move selection abilities of the ones tested here to Robbo/Ippo is Rybka.Don wrote:grab it from here:michiguel wrote:Please do... my gmail account is mballicoraDon wrote:That is basically how the test works, and a trivial tcl script process it. In the tester it's 1 line per position with other information in the line. But if anyone wants the data I have processed I can make it available as a text file, 1 move per line.hgm wrote:That is even better. Just give a list of the moves. (E.g. in long algebraic notation, all concatenated to a very long string.)
Miguel
http://greencheeks.homelinux.org:8015/~drd/clone.tar.gz
The tcl script is included and it will try to process all files with a .res extension in the same directory the script runs in.
It's not polished, it's a kludge. And the ippolito data is pieced together because the program crashed 3 times and I had to restart it at the problem that crashed, but it is accurate.
Don
I would be *very* cautious with this. More engines should be included in the analysis too. However, I think this could be a potentially interesting screening method if more engines are included, more sets of positions are added, and a more rigorous bootstrap analysis are performed.
The only thing I can say for certain, is that if people saw similarities in style between R3 and RL/IPPO, it may not have been a complete allucination.
Miguel
