On today’s show, we are joined by our co-host, Becky Hansis-O’Neil. Becky is a Ph.D. student at the University of Missouri, St Louis, where she studies bumblebees and tarantulas to understand their learning and cognitive work.
She joins us to discuss the paper: Perception in Chess. The paper aimed to understand how chess players perceive the positions of chess pieces on a chess board. She discussed the findings paper. She spoke about situations where grandmasters had better recall of chess positions than beginners and situations where they did not.
Becky and Kyle discussed the use of chess engines for cheating. They also discussed how chess players use chunking. Becky discussed some approaches to studying chess cognition, including eye tracking, EEG, and MRI.
## Paper in Focus
Perception in chess
## Resources
Detecting Cheating in Chess with Ken Regan
Facebook Bargaining Bots Invented a Language
Under Resourced Languages
Named Entity Recognition
The Death of a Language
Neural Turing Machines
Data Infrastructure in the Cloud
NCAA Predictions on Spark
The Transformer
Mapping Dialects with Twitter Data
Sentiment Analysis
Attention Primer
Cross-lingual Short-text Matching
ELMo
BLEU
Simultaneous Translation at Baidu
Human vs Machine Transcription
seq2seq
Text Mining in R
Recurrent Relational Networks
Text World and Word Embedding Lower Bounds
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