Can Google solve riddles?

Google’s artificial intelligence wasn’t. A deep neural network based on one built by Google’s DeepMind team – software that has previously taught itself to play several dozen classic arcade games – can now solve riddles like this one.

Who has the hat game?

The hat game often confuses those who play it. That’s because the answer to the question, “Who has the hat?” at the end of the speaker’s story has nothing to do with anything he has said. Instead, the first person to make a sound after the speaker asks the question is the one who “has the hat”.

What is the colour of hat?

As they all know that there are 2 black and 2 white hats. Suppose: Colour of A,C’s hat is same i.e both white(or black). Then D would have known that the colour of his hat is black(or white), since there are only two white hats, and he would have called out that colour in no time.

How are the 100 hats in the riddle of the week?

One hundred prisoners are lined up single file. A blue or red hat is placed on each of their heads randomly. The prisoners cannot see the color of the hat on their own head, but they can see the colors of all the hats in front of them. The prisoner in the back can clearly see all 99 hats in front of him.

Can a AI solve the 100 hat Riddle?

The answers to these riddles are based upon coordinated strategy, and the researchers say the AI’s ability to master such tasks reveals a step in the direction of collaborative systems. The prisoners can see the hats of the people lined up in from of them, but they cannot look at the hats behind them, or at their own.

How many hats can the prisoner see in Riddle of the week?

The prisoner in the back can clearly see all 99 hats in front of him. The 50th prisoner in line can see the 49 hats in front of him, and the prisoner in the front of the line cannot see anything but the forest before him.

What’s the solution to the puzzle of 100 hats?

Here’s the solution to the Puzzle of 100 Hats, as explained by the person who submitted it, Terence Gaffney, a mathematics professor at Northeastern University: You have a 100% chance of saving all but the last prisoner, and a 50% chance of saving that one.

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