Komodo modifies piece value based on game stage (related to remaining material), and a whole lot of other things. We try to make Komodo's eval as smooth as possible.Jesse Gersenson wrote:Are material values static values (think, knight = 3)? Or are they more complicated, like perhaps a function of how many pieces are on the board, or how many pieces have moved from the normal, or defined, starting position, etc?lkaufman wrote:...Yet any attempt to simply raise material values gets a negative elo result here at ultra fast levels like 10" +.05".
Komodo knight odd match vs FM Victor Bolzoni : report
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Re: Komodo knight odd match vs FM Victor Bolzoni : report
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Re: Komodo knight odd match vs FM Victor Bolzoni : report
They depend on what other pieces and pawns are on the board, but not on the position of those pieces.Jesse Gersenson wrote:Are material values static values (think, knight = 3)? Or are they more complicated, like perhaps a function of how many pieces are on the board, or how many pieces have moved from the normal, or defined, starting position, etc?lkaufman wrote:...Yet any attempt to simply raise material values gets a negative elo result here at ultra fast levels like 10" +.05".
Komodo rules!
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Re: Komodo knight odd match vs FM Victor Bolzoni : report
It seems that with these "equal", very unbalanced positions, Komodo behaves fairly well, although it's hard to test with my notebook. Taking this position which shows +0.67 for White after 10 minutes of thinking:lkaufman wrote:
The difference in your results is huge, and I doubt that it would go away entirely at a longer tc. I would suggest removing the White queen knight from the 7 move position, and making some other small change to the position to get close to a zero score from Komodo, and then running an equal time match. I expect that the extra piece side will win the match comfortably. Yet any attempt to simply raise material values gets a negative elo result here at ultra fast levels like 10" +.05". I'm at a loss to explain why. Anyone have any ideas how to reconcile these seemingly contradictory facts?
[d]rnbqkbnr/pppppppp/8/3P4/2B1PB2/5N2/PPP1QPPP/2KR3R w kq - 0 1
The match outcome at ultra-fast is reasonable, just a bit depressed for White considering its +0.67 advantage:
Games : 100 (finished)
White Wins : 48 (48.0 %)
Black Wins : 36 (36.0 %)
Draws : 16 (16.0 %)
Unfinished : 0
With this position showing 0.00 after 10 minutes:
[d]rnbqkbnr/pppppppp/8/8/2BPPB2/2N3P1/PPP1QP1P/1K1R3R w kq - 0 1
The match outcome is again reasonable, and again White is a bit subdued, in 0.00 evaluated position:
Games : 100 (finished)
White Wins : 36 (36.0 %)
Black Wins : 48 (48.0 %)
Draws : 16 (16.0 %)
Unfinished : 0
It seems that the positional overvaluation is in the middle of these 2 positions, about 0.33 or some 10% of positional factors, if these two results mean something (too few games, too short TC). It's hard to interpret what this all combined amounts to, the positional +3.90 advantage alone showed much less importance than a real knight, but now they pretty much compensate each other, not totally, though. Maybe longer time control corrects for these anomalies.
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Re: Komodo knight odd match vs FM Victor Bolzoni : report
Can I just tell you Kai,Laskos wrote:It seems that with these "equal", very unbalanced positions, Komodo behaves fairly well, although it's hard to test with my notebook. Taking this position which shows +0.67 for White after 10 minutes of thinking:lkaufman wrote:
The difference in your results is huge, and I doubt that it would go away entirely at a longer tc. I would suggest removing the White queen knight from the 7 move position, and making some other small change to the position to get close to a zero score from Komodo, and then running an equal time match. I expect that the extra piece side will win the match comfortably. Yet any attempt to simply raise material values gets a negative elo result here at ultra fast levels like 10" +.05". I'm at a loss to explain why. Anyone have any ideas how to reconcile these seemingly contradictory facts?
[d]rnbqkbnr/pppppppp/8/3P4/2B1PB2/5N2/PPP1QPPP/2KR3R w kq - 0 1
The match outcome at ultra-fast is reasonable, just a bit depressed for White considering its +0.67 advantage:
Games : 100 (finished)
White Wins : 48 (48.0 %)
Black Wins : 36 (36.0 %)
Draws : 16 (16.0 %)
Unfinished : 0
With this position showing 0.00 after 10 minutes:
[d]rnbqkbnr/pppppppp/8/8/2BPPB2/2N3P1/PPP1QP1P/1K1R3R w kq - 0 1
The match outcome is again reasonable, and again White is a bit subdued, in 0.00 evaluated position:
Games : 100 (finished)
White Wins : 36 (36.0 %)
Black Wins : 48 (48.0 %)
Draws : 16 (16.0 %)
Unfinished : 0
It seems that the positional overvaluation is in the middle of these 2 positions, about 0.33 or some 10% of positional factors, if these two results mean something (too few games, too short TC). It's hard to interpret what this all combined amounts to, the positional +3.90 advantage alone showed much less importance than a real knight, but now they pretty much compensate each other, not totally, though. Maybe longer time control corrects for these anomalies.
It's examples like this which is why I have had to unlearn most of what I thought I knew about the game. Tarrasch would die again if he were to return, and Nimzowitsch would be laughing his butt off.
"Good decisions come from experience, and experience comes from bad decisions."
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Ted Summers
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Ted Summers
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Re: Komodo knight odd match vs FM Victor Bolzoni : report
I'm not sure why you say that. The classical rule is that you need three tempi for a pawn and three pawns for a knight. In these examples White has about 8 tempi for the knight, so he should be a tad worse according to the classical ideas. For an example of what was considered adequate compensation for a knight in the 1800s, look up the Muzio Gambit, which i think is still considered about equal.AdminX wrote:Can I just tell you Kai,Laskos wrote:It seems that with these "equal", very unbalanced positions, Komodo behaves fairly well, although it's hard to test with my notebook. Taking this position which shows +0.67 for White after 10 minutes of thinking:lkaufman wrote:
The difference in your results is huge, and I doubt that it would go away entirely at a longer tc. I would suggest removing the White queen knight from the 7 move position, and making some other small change to the position to get close to a zero score from Komodo, and then running an equal time match. I expect that the extra piece side will win the match comfortably. Yet any attempt to simply raise material values gets a negative elo result here at ultra fast levels like 10" +.05". I'm at a loss to explain why. Anyone have any ideas how to reconcile these seemingly contradictory facts?
[d]rnbqkbnr/pppppppp/8/3P4/2B1PB2/5N2/PPP1QPPP/2KR3R w kq - 0 1
The match outcome at ultra-fast is reasonable, just a bit depressed for White considering its +0.67 advantage:
Games : 100 (finished)
White Wins : 48 (48.0 %)
Black Wins : 36 (36.0 %)
Draws : 16 (16.0 %)
Unfinished : 0
With this position showing 0.00 after 10 minutes:
[d]rnbqkbnr/pppppppp/8/8/2BPPB2/2N3P1/PPP1QP1P/1K1R3R w kq - 0 1
The match outcome is again reasonable, and again White is a bit subdued, in 0.00 evaluated position:
Games : 100 (finished)
White Wins : 36 (36.0 %)
Black Wins : 48 (48.0 %)
Draws : 16 (16.0 %)
Unfinished : 0
It seems that the positional overvaluation is in the middle of these 2 positions, about 0.33 or some 10% of positional factors, if these two results mean something (too few games, too short TC). It's hard to interpret what this all combined amounts to, the positional +3.90 advantage alone showed much less importance than a real knight, but now they pretty much compensate each other, not totally, though. Maybe longer time control corrects for these anomalies.
It's examples like this which is why I have had to unlearn most of what I thought I knew about the game. Tarrasch would die again if he were to return, and Nimzowitsch would be laughing his butt off.
Komodo rules!
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Re: Komodo knight odd match vs FM Victor Bolzoni : report
I think that what's going on is that with a development advantage you need to play sharply to fully exploit it, which favors the stronger player. So even if eight tempi (let's say) are adequate compensation for a knight, an eight move handicap requires more skill to exploit than an extra piece.Laskos wrote:It seems that with these "equal", very unbalanced positions, Komodo behaves fairly well, although it's hard to test with my notebook. Taking this position which shows +0.67 for White after 10 minutes of thinking:lkaufman wrote:
The difference in your results is huge, and I doubt that it would go away entirely at a longer tc. I would suggest removing the White queen knight from the 7 move position, and making some other small change to the position to get close to a zero score from Komodo, and then running an equal time match. I expect that the extra piece side will win the match comfortably. Yet any attempt to simply raise material values gets a negative elo result here at ultra fast levels like 10" +.05". I'm at a loss to explain why. Anyone have any ideas how to reconcile these seemingly contradictory facts?
[d]rnbqkbnr/pppppppp/8/3P4/2B1PB2/5N2/PPP1QPPP/2KR3R w kq - 0 1
The match outcome at ultra-fast is reasonable, just a bit depressed for White considering its +0.67 advantage:
Games : 100 (finished)
White Wins : 48 (48.0 %)
Black Wins : 36 (36.0 %)
Draws : 16 (16.0 %)
Unfinished : 0
With this position showing 0.00 after 10 minutes:
[d]rnbqkbnr/pppppppp/8/8/2BPPB2/2N3P1/PPP1QP1P/1K1R3R w kq - 0 1
The match outcome is again reasonable, and again White is a bit subdued, in 0.00 evaluated position:
Games : 100 (finished)
White Wins : 36 (36.0 %)
Black Wins : 48 (48.0 %)
Draws : 16 (16.0 %)
Unfinished : 0
It seems that the positional overvaluation is in the middle of these 2 positions, about 0.33 or some 10% of positional factors, if these two results mean something (too few games, too short TC). It's hard to interpret what this all combined amounts to, the positional +3.90 advantage alone showed much less importance than a real knight, but now they pretty much compensate each other, not totally, though. Maybe longer time control corrects for these anomalies.
It would be very interesting to test your hypothesis that longer tc favors the attacker. If you double or quadruple your time limit we could find out. It's not obvious to me which side benefits more from longer tc, the attacker or the side with more material.
Komodo rules!
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Re: Komodo knight odd match vs FM Victor Bolzoni : report
That's why you are smart. Time is needed to figure out how to take advantage of tempi advantage. Skill is needed (in the form of time).lkaufman wrote:I think that what's going on is that with a development advantage you need to play sharply to fully exploit it, which favors the stronger player. So even if eight tempi (let's say) are adequate compensation for a knight, an eight move handicap requires more skill to exploit than an extra piece.Laskos wrote:It seems that with these "equal", very unbalanced positions, Komodo behaves fairly well, although it's hard to test with my notebook. Taking this position which shows +0.67 for White after 10 minutes of thinking:lkaufman wrote:
The difference in your results is huge, and I doubt that it would go away entirely at a longer tc. I would suggest removing the White queen knight from the 7 move position, and making some other small change to the position to get close to a zero score from Komodo, and then running an equal time match. I expect that the extra piece side will win the match comfortably. Yet any attempt to simply raise material values gets a negative elo result here at ultra fast levels like 10" +.05". I'm at a loss to explain why. Anyone have any ideas how to reconcile these seemingly contradictory facts?
[d]rnbqkbnr/pppppppp/8/3P4/2B1PB2/5N2/PPP1QPPP/2KR3R w kq - 0 1
The match outcome at ultra-fast is reasonable, just a bit depressed for White considering its +0.67 advantage:
Games : 100 (finished)
White Wins : 48 (48.0 %)
Black Wins : 36 (36.0 %)
Draws : 16 (16.0 %)
Unfinished : 0
With this position showing 0.00 after 10 minutes:
[d]rnbqkbnr/pppppppp/8/8/2BPPB2/2N3P1/PPP1QP1P/1K1R3R w kq - 0 1
The match outcome is again reasonable, and again White is a bit subdued, in 0.00 evaluated position:
Games : 100 (finished)
White Wins : 36 (36.0 %)
Black Wins : 48 (48.0 %)
Draws : 16 (16.0 %)
Unfinished : 0
It seems that the positional overvaluation is in the middle of these 2 positions, about 0.33 or some 10% of positional factors, if these two results mean something (too few games, too short TC). It's hard to interpret what this all combined amounts to, the positional +3.90 advantage alone showed much less importance than a real knight, but now they pretty much compensate each other, not totally, though. Maybe longer time control corrects for these anomalies.
It would be very interesting to test your hypothesis that longer tc favors the attacker. If you double or quadruple your time limit we could find out. It's not obvious to me which side benefits more from longer tc, the attacker or the side with more material.
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Re: Komodo knight odd match vs FM Victor Bolzoni : report
Nice, maybe that's why while time handicapped the positional advantage is harder to convert than material. I can confirm, though with difficulty on my notebook, in not very many games and only one position, that the hypothesis of longer time control favoring the attacker is valid. The games are on weak 2 cores of 1.2GHz each. When I will be back home, I may test more thoroughly.lkaufman wrote:
I think that what's going on is that with a development advantage you need to play sharply to fully exploit it, which favors the stronger player. So even if eight tempi (let's say) are adequate compensation for a knight, an eight move handicap requires more skill to exploit than an extra piece.
It would be very interesting to test your hypothesis that longer tc favors the attacker. If you double or quadruple your time limit we could find out. It's not obvious to me which side benefits more from longer tc, the attacker or the side with more material.
With the previous position showing 0.00 after 10 minutes:
[d]rnbqkbnr/pppppppp/8/8/2BPPB2/2N3P1/PPP1QP1P/1K1R3R w kq - 0 1
Increasing time controls (still very fast):
Code: Select all
2.5''+0.025''
Games : 100 (finished)
White Wins : 34 (34.0 %)
Black Wins : 52 (52.0 %)
Draws : 14 (14.0 %)
Unfinished : 0
5''+0.05''
Games : 100 (finished)
White Wins : 36 (36.0 %)
Black Wins : 48 (48.0 %)
Draws : 16 (16.0 %)
Unfinished : 0
20''+0.2''
Games : 100 (finished)
White Wins : 42 (42.0 %)
Black Wins : 37 (37.0 %)
Draws : 21 (21.0 %)
Unfinished : 0
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Re: Komodo knight odd match vs FM Victor Bolzoni : report
lkaufman wrote: I'm not sure why you say that. The classical rule is that you need three tempi for a pawn and three pawns for a knight. In these examples White has about 8 tempi for the knight, so he should be a tad worse according to the classical ideas. For an example of what was considered adequate compensation for a knight in the 1800s, look up the Muzio Gambit, which i think is still considered about equal.
Hi Larry,
Well when you look at the position, white has more than tempi, he also has a great space advantage as well as control of the center and a big lead in development. That's why I say that, according to classical rules white's position should be crushing. At least visually in the past that's what I would have thought.
"Good decisions come from experience, and experience comes from bad decisions."
__________________________________________________________________
Ted Summers
__________________________________________________________________
Ted Summers
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- Full name: Jörg Oster
Re: Komodo knight odd match vs FM Victor Bolzoni : report
Me too. OTOH, the starting position is very solid.AdminX wrote:lkaufman wrote: I'm not sure why you say that. The classical rule is that you need three tempi for a pawn and three pawns for a knight. In these examples White has about 8 tempi for the knight, so he should be a tad worse according to the classical ideas. For an example of what was considered adequate compensation for a knight in the 1800s, look up the Muzio Gambit, which i think is still considered about equal.
Hi Larry,
Well when you look at the position, white has more than tempi, he also has a great space advantage as well as control of the center and a big lead in development. That's why I say that, according to classical rules white's position should be crushing. At least visually in the past that's what I would have thought.
I think I would go for Bxf7+!
If you allow Black to consolidate his position, all the mentioned advantages vanish into thin air.
Jörg Oster