Difference between revisions of "Matej Guid"

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<ref>[https://en.chessbase.com/post/computer-analysis-of-world-champions Computer analysis of world champions] by [[Søren Riis]], [[ChessBase|ChessBase News]], November 02, 2006</ref>,
 
<ref>[https://en.chessbase.com/post/computer-analysis-of-world-champions Computer analysis of world champions] by [[Søren Riis]], [[ChessBase|ChessBase News]], November 02, 2006</ref>,
 
further elaborated with [[Aritz Pérez]] in 2008 <ref>[[Matej Guid]], [[Aritz Pérez]], [[Ivan Bratko]] ('''2008'''). ''How trustworthy is Crafty's analysis of world chess champions''? [[ICGA Journal#31_3|ICGA Journal, Vol. 31, No. 3]]</ref>.
 
further elaborated with [[Aritz Pérez]] in 2008 <ref>[[Matej Guid]], [[Aritz Pérez]], [[Ivan Bratko]] ('''2008'''). ''How trustworthy is Crafty's analysis of world chess champions''? [[ICGA Journal#31_3|ICGA Journal, Vol. 31, No. 3]]</ref>.
At the [[Advances in Computer Games 14]] conference at [[Leiden University]], 2015, Matej Guid lectured on programming [[Progressive Chess]] <ref>[[Vito Janko]], [[Matej Guid]] ('''2015'''). ''Development of a Program for Playing Progressive Chess''. [[Advances in Computer Games 14]]</ref> and introduced a progressive chess playing program developed by [[Vito Janko]] and himself <ref>[https://ailab.si/progressive-chess/ The program for playing Progressive Chess] by [[Vito Janko]] and [[Matej Guid]]</ref>, further promoted by [[Frederic Friedel]] at [[ChessBase]] <ref> [https://en.chessbase.com/post/new-year-s-present-progressive-chess New Year's present: Progressive Chess] by [[Frederic Friedel]], [[ChessBase|ChessBase News]], January 01, 2018</ref> ..  
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At the [[Advances in Computer Games 14]] conference at [[Leiden University]], 2015, Matej Guid lectured on programming [[Progressive Chess]] <ref>[[Vito Janko]], [[Matej Guid]] ('''2015'''). ''Development of a Program for Playing Progressive Chess''. [[Advances in Computer Games 14]]</ref> and introduced a progressive chess playing program developed by [[Vito Janko]] and himself <ref>[https://ailab.si/progressive-chess/ The program for playing Progressive Chess] by [[Vito Janko]] and [[Matej Guid]]</ref>, further promoted by [[Frederic Friedel]] at [[ChessBase]] <ref> [https://en.chessbase.com/post/new-year-s-present-progressive-chess New Year's present: Progressive Chess] by [[Frederic Friedel]], [[ChessBase|ChessBase News]], January 01, 2018</ref> .
  
 
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Revision as of 12:23, 22 November 2020

Home * People * Matej Guid

Matej Guid [1]

Matej Guid,
a Slovenian FIDE master of chess, computer scientist and researcher at the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory University of Ljubljana. His research interests covers computer game-playing (especially chess), automated explanation / tutoring systems, heuristic search, and machine learning. Along with Ivan Bratko, Matej Guid claimed to identify the relative playing strength of World Chess Champions by comparing their move choices with chess programs, in particular a modified version of Crafty, as published in ICGA Journal, Vol. 29, No. 2 in 2006 [2] [3] [4], further elaborated with Aritz Pérez in 2008 [5]. At the Advances in Computer Games 14 conference at Leiden University, 2015, Matej Guid lectured on programming Progressive Chess [6] and introduced a progressive chess playing program developed by Vito Janko and himself [7], further promoted by Frederic Friedel at ChessBase [8] .

Photos

MatejGuid-ACG14.jpg

Advances in Computer Games 14: Ingo Althöfer announcing Matej Guid on Progressive Chess [9]

Selected Publications

[10]

2006 ...

2010 ...

2015 ...

External Links

References

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