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AI Games

MIT-Designed Game Used To Train an AI System 32

Ian Lamont writes "MIT Media Lab and the Singapore-MIT Gambit Game Lab have just released Improviso, an online game that is part of a research project to create a more realistic game AI. Improviso requires two players, a Lead Actor and Director, who pretend to shoot a low-budget science fiction movie about a government cover-up of aliens at Area 51. The goal of the project is to gather recorded improv from thousands of games, which can be used to train an AI system that will be able to play the role of NPCs. Jeff Orkin, the MIT researcher who led game development, says that the best time to play Improviso is between 7 pm and 10 pm. Orkin is also the creator of a game AI called goal oriented action programming, first used in F.E.A.R. in 2005 and later employed in F.E.A.R. 2 and Fallout 3."
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MIT-Designed Game Used To Train an AI System

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  • by Sparrow1492 ( 1962256 ) on Thursday March 17, 2011 @02:34AM (#35513424)
    So we're using first person shooters where the goal is to kill everything that looks like a human to help train AIs. This can only end well. . .
    • Yeah: camping sniper-bots. Even more infuriating, since they have infinite patience.

    • Good joke and all, but not pertinent. I'm guessing you haven't read the summary.

      Improviso requires two players, a Lead Actor and Director, who pretend to shoot a low-budget science fiction movie about a government cover-up of aliens at Area 51

      Frankly, though, I'd rather have terminators genociding the hell out of us than getting stuck with an endless swarm of moviebots making Friedberg-Seltzer-like torture devices 24/7.

  • And suddenly I lost all interest in the project.
    • Hehe, just what I was thinking. The enemies in Fallout 3 were pretty damn dumb even compared to some older games, unless of course their goal was defined as "run straight to the guy with the gun and die in a horribly overdone way by exploding in gore even though he shot your foot with a 9mm" in which case the AI performed wonderfully.
  • "Jeff Orkin says that the best time to play Improviso is between 7 pm and 10 pm". What timezone? Is he talking GMT or American time? If American then which one - don't they have 6? Maybe he's talking about Australian (unlikely as he works at MIT, but you never know).
    Maybe it's supposed to be 7pm to 10 pm local time wherever in the world you are?

  • >the best time to play Improviso is between 7 pm and 10 pm. [EST I presume]

    Argh, the least convenient time for us Europeans...
  • FTA: a really boring trailer. Most low-budget sci-fi movies I've seen were considerably more interesting than the trailer to this game. Skynet will be trained by the incredibly bored.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    What do you expect from someone whose name is an anagram of 'jerkin off'?
  • ... does it run Linux? No, it does not. Windows only.
  • by ciderbrew ( 1860166 ) on Thursday March 17, 2011 @06:13AM (#35514394)
    I always thought the hard part about game AI was making an NPC work with the right level of crap.
    A bot can shoot and hit its mark 99.999999% of the time. They know all the coordinates and states of the game and a programmer can add in some very standard code to win each time.

    If we can just get over an NPC not getting stuck in wall and going mental when it gets stuck in a door then we will be happier.
    • by mcvos ( 645701 )

      FPS bots have nothing to do with AI. When you've got access to exact coordinates, hitting is a matter of simple math. Making believable FPS bots it not a matter of making them intelligent, it's about disguising their superior data access. If you showed the bot the same rendered polygons that human players get to see, then it becomes a matter of intelligence.

      AI is far more relevant in strategy games, and still practically unexplored in story driven CRPGs. And that last bit sounds a bit like what Improvisio m

  • by eulernet ( 1132389 ) on Thursday March 17, 2011 @07:15AM (#35514754)

    I would have called it:

    Goal Oriented Action Training System for Entertainment

    • I would have called it:

      Goal Oriented Action Training System for Entertainment

      I would have called it:
      New and Improved State Machine, now with Function Pointers!
      (some assembly required)

      I don't know about you, but If I'm going to spend my time working for a game company helping to train their AI algorithms then I expect one or more of:

      • Reduced prices for games that use our crowd-sourced labor.
      • A paycheck of some sort -- Even in-game money or some exclusive perks would be better than nothing.
      • Open Source Code (if not AT release, then no more than 10 months afterwards, not 10 yea
      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

        I believe MIT had released a restaurant type game where yes, you do end up in the credits (you can either be a waiter or a customer). But that's it. I'm not sure what became of it though - I tried it briefly but never could find anyone online.

        What's next? They have us play a new Kinect game where we act out the scenes displayed so they can crowd-source their motion capture too? Hint: I only consider working for free if a project is open source -- All others must pay.

        Related, Microsoft released YooStar 2 [xbox.com] whi

      • by Jaqenn ( 996058 )
        They are paying in the following currency: the interesting experience of logging into their server and pushing buttons.

        Now lets wait to see if the labor market contains people who want that pay.
  • can it play global thermonuclear war?

  • The only thing I can think about is what will happen when /v/ hears about this.

    Rob

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