Vladimir Arlazarov

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Vladimir L’vovich Arlazarov

Vladimir L’vovich Arlazarov (Russian Арлазаров Владимир Львович) is a Russian computer scientist born in Moscow.

Research work[]

In 1965 at Alexander Kronrod’s laboratory at the Moscow Institute for Theoretical and Experimental Physics (ITEP), Vladimir Arlazarov co-developed the , together with Georgy Adelson-Velsky, and , advised by Russian chess master and three-time world champion Mikhail Botvinnik.

At the end of 1966 a began between the , running on an IBM 7090 computer, and the on a Soviet M-20 computer. The match played over nine months was won 3-1 by the ITEP program, despite playing on slower hardware.

By 1971, Mikhail Donskoy joined with Arlazarov and Uskov to program its successor on an ICL System 4/70 at the , called Kaissa, which became the first World Computer Chess Champion in .

Arlazarov is one of the inventors of the Method of Four Russians.

Selected publications[]

  • Adelson-Velsky, Georgy; Arlazarov, Vladimir; ; ; (1970), Programming a Computer to Play Chess, Russian Mathematical Surveys, 25, pp. 221–262
  • Adelson-Velsky, Georgy; Arlazarov, Vladimir; Donskoy, Mikhail (1975), "Some Methods of Controlling the Tree Search in Chess Program", Artificial Intelligence, 6 (4): 361–371, doi:10.1016/0004-3702(75)90021-1, ISSN 0004-3702 Reprinted in
  • Adelson-Velsky, Georgy; Arlazarov, Vladimir; Donskoy, Mikhail (1977), "On the Structure of an Important Class of Exhaustive Problems and Methods of Search Reduction for them", Advances in Computer Chess, 1
  • Adelson-Velsky, Georgy; Arlazarov, Vladimir; Donskoy, Mikhail (1979), , Donald Michie and L.I. Mikulich (ed.), "Algorithms of adaptive search", Machine Intelligence, Chichester: Ellis Horwood, 9, pp. 373–384
  • Adelson-Velsky, Georgy; Arlazarov, Vladimir; Donskoy, Mikhail (1988), Algorithms for Games, New York, NY: Springer-Verlag, ISBN 3-540-96629-3
  • Arlazarov, Vladimir; (1979), , Donald Michie and L.I. Mikulich (ed.), "Computer Analysis of a Rook End-Game", Machine Intelligence, Chichester: Ellis Horwood, 9, pp. 361–371

See also[]

References[]

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External links[]

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