What Is A Robbery? Devin Haney - Vasyl Lomachenko Scored By Unbaised Artificial Intelligence.
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Yeah. He won. But it's more of seeing how DeepStrike scores fights. I have Golovkin vs Canelo II posted here. And I have Haggler vs Duran. I watched them last night, and it's actually incredible what one thinks lands or doesn't land.
I don't know if I should spoil those fights for you because I think it's fun seeing it through the eyes of the AI.
The company is called Jabbr, and I think we should all get behind them and support them.Comment
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Me too. I had it closer, however. I had it either 8-4 Loma or 9-3 Loma, and I thought I was being super biased at the end with the 9-3. But if we go by what landed and didn't land, as well as how effective the punches were and who was being the effective aggressor, then Loma wins by 10 rounds.
But there were some close rounds where Loma just edged it. So sometimes these scores can be misleading.
I watched Duran and Hagler last night, and I was surprised by how many punches Duran is able to avoid. The only way Hagler could really hit him is punch from the inside.
Anyway, the company is called Jabbr, and this is the future. I think we should all support them so that we can take some steps to clean up the sport.
(Oh yeah, check on Golovkin vs Canelo II. That was very interesting.)Comment
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DeepStrike doesn't score fights. It just collects information about the fight and presents it to the viewers at the movement. Because judging is nuanced, Jabbr decided not to go so far as to score the fights with the AI.Originally posted by Mooshashi
How is "Agression" measured? Shouldn't the parameter be "effective agression"? By giving aggression a big proportion of the scoring then surely De Los Santos defeated Stevenson the other night.
Scoring a boxing match is purely subjective. I don't see how a program can be subjective as it is ruled by algorithms.
However, to answer your question:
Pressure: The pressure metric is measured by assessing forward movement, opponent moving backwards, having opponent in the corner or on ropes, staying in the mid-range or inside. Ultimately, this alludes to "ring generalship."
Aggression: The aggression metric uses indicators such as throwing punches with a high power commit value, throwing combinations, throwing the first and/or last punch in an exchange, etc. This metric alludes to who is being the "effective aggressor."
Both of these metrics have to be considered along with "clean punches" and the quality and quantity of those punches and in my opinion, at this movement, should not be relied on to heavily. It's still about who landed more punches and who landed the more damaging punches (high impact).Comment
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Bro. Take a moment to think about what you're saying here. Scoring has a degree of subjectivity to it but it's still based primarily on who landed a punch and how hard was that punch. It's not that subjective.Originally posted by MooshashiScoring a boxing match is purely subjective. I don't see how a program can be subjective as it is ruled by algorithms.
There's scoring criteria and it's very clear.
See, I think this fight in particular has you triggered, which is why I recommend Hagler vs Duran and Canelo vs Golovkin II. This fight is just going to get you in your feelings.Comment
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Why does this tigger you so much man? I'm curious. This is about artificial intelligence scoring fights. But here you are, moaning and whinging that the example is Loma vs Haney. Why? You need to be honest about this (or be honest with yourself).Comment
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I think it’s more than clear who’s really triggered here.
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