Book chapter
DNA Starts to Learn Poker
DNA Computing
23 Aug 2002
Abstract
DNA is used to implement a simplified version of poker. Strategies are evolved that mix bluffing with telling the truth. The essential features are (1) to wait your turn, (2) to default to the most conservative course, (3) to probabilistically override the default in some cases, and (4) to learn from payoffs. Two players each use an independent population of strategies that adapt and learn from their experiences in competition.
Metrics
10 Record Views
6 citations in Scopus
Details
- Title
- DNA Starts to Learn Poker
- Creators
- David Harlan Wood - University of DelawareHong Bi - University of DelawareSteven O. Kimbrough - University of PennsylvaniaDong-Jun Wu - Drexel UniversityJunghuei Chen - University of DelawareJie Chen - Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
- Publication Details
- DNA Computing
- Series
- Lecture Notes in Computer Science
- Publisher
- Springer Berlin Heidelberg; Berlin, Heidelberg
- Resource Type
- Book chapter
- Language
- English
- Academic Unit
- Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
- Scopus ID
- 2-s2.0-35248836934
- Other Identifier
- 991019173798204721