Freedom and Papa both use mobility as their primary term in their evaluation functions. As with Wita, both use the ratio of computer's moves / opponent moves. Papa and Wita also multiply by the ratio of the squares controlled and Papa goes one step further and takes the logarithm of this product to form the "entropy" of the position. The true merit of this entropy over the product ratio was not made clear, but it does ensure that in extreme situations the evaluation remains more closely bounded.
a chess program by Nils Barricelli. It participated at the First World Computer Chess Championship 1974 in Stockholm, running on a CDC Cyber 74. It lost versus the strong CHAOS and Ribbit in round 1 and 2 respectively, and had a lucky draw from Tell.
Barricelli, at that time affiliated with the Oslo University [1], had already experience in chess programming for his Symbioorganisms experiments at University of Manchester in 1962, where Alex Bell worked for him and wrote his first legal-move generator. Freedom's evaluation was primary based on the ratio of own and opponents mobility aka number of legal moves.
Table of Contents
Quotes
Tony Marsland mentioned Freedom, Papa and other programs participating the WCCC 1974 in his handwritten notes [3] on the Hayes and Levy book [4] :Freedom vs. CHAOS
WCCC 1974, round 1, Freedom - CHAOS [5]:External Links
Chess Program
Misc
Klaus Doldinger, Johnny Griffin, Kristian Schulze, Brian Auger , Volker Kriegel, Alexis Korner, Wolfgang Schmid, Curt Cress, Pete York
References
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