I explained what I do, and I don't do any of the speculation at all. I simply pointed out that there were plenty of ideas around, including the one from Berliner. I also mentioned that were I to fiddle around with this, I would also take my opponent's supposed strength into consideration and I would be much more likely to speculate if playing a human as opposed to a computer...hgm wrote:My point was that 'last minute' merely means 'large depth'. Apparently there are ways to postpone the loss to a very late ply, or an earlier iteration would have already seen it before.
If you think that it is preferable to do the move that leads to such a late, but bigger loss than trying to limit the damage by giving less (but still lethal) material early on, because the opponent is much more likely to miss a deep tactic than an shallow one, the score should reflect it.
Imagine you would have finished the 20th iteration, with the conclusion that the move that looked good (say +0.03) on the 19th now does -8, and your best move of the 20th does -2.5. Wouldn't it still be better to go for the -8 than for the -2.5. And if you came from +5.03 in stead, would't it be better to go for a certain +2.5 than risk the -3? And wouldn't that be exactly the same even if you were able to finish a 21st iteration after that (confirming the scores of the 20th)?
So my point is that these are things that should be reflected by the score, and not by accidental timing effects.
As far as your example goes, it would depend. If I am playing (say) Rybka, I'm taking the best score period, and not speculating, because it is doubtful Rybka will overlook something that I saw. As a human, I certainly consider my opponent when choosing a move, particularly when things are "dicey". I also consider not just the "value being lost" but the actual final "value" as well, to handle the case I had mentioned previously, which has some vague notion of expected winning chances folded in.