Walter Crist, who researches ancient games at Leiden University in the Netherlands, first saw the carved limestone in 2020, at the Het Romeins Museum. Located in the southern Dutch city of Heerlen, ...
“This is the first time that AI-driven simulated play has been used in concert with archaeological methods to identify a ...
The English woman found the slab in her garden about 20 years ago Joelle Goldstein is a Senior News Editor on the TV team for PEOPLE Digital. She has been with the brand since 2017, working as an ...
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AI reconstructed a lost Roman board game from a mysterious limestone slab - and now you can play it
Researchers couldn't figure out this ancient Roman game. So they let AI play it thousands of times until it cracked the code.
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A rtificial Intelligence (AI) has been able to crack the rules of a mysterious Roman board game that’s been lost to history for over 1,500 years. By analysing the scratches on a weathered limestone ...
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