John Fairbairn wrote:
Bill
Great topic to discuss. I'd like to get off on the right foot so wish to clear up one point: "Research suggests that go professionals have sculpted their brains at an early age to have a large workspace (short term memory) devoted to go reading."
I now have software that I use to download and store material from the internet that I think I may cite later on. But I read about that research before I started downloading possible references. I think that it was in the '90s in Japan. OC, it is only one study, vaguely recalled, so it is only suggestive. The part about sculpting the brain is my own interpretation. The part about having a specialized area of working memory is not.
Sculpting of the brain begins in the womb. Our genes may dictate that certain neuronal connections be made, but do not specify the details of how those connection are made. What happens is that a number of attempts at connection are made, and the successful ones get stimulated. The unsuccessful, unstimulated neurons die off. This kind of brain sculpture by stimulation and cell death continues at a great rate during childhood. And, from what I have heard in recent years, it continues at a slower rate through the teenage years into adulthood. (Since neuronal death continues throughout life, you could say that it never ends.) Anyway, it is quite possible that children, through calculating go variations, could sculpt a specialized area in their brains for doing just that. Aitken's ability to recall intermediate results suggests that he was able to sculpt such an area for numerical calculation, even though he started at the late age of 13.
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It may be that you are using terms in a different way from me, but short-term memory to me is what some call 'working memory' and is that area of the brain which acts as a filter between physical perception and long-term memory.
I have not kept up with neuropsychology, but I believe that we now know that things are rather more complicated than that. In problem solving, as I recall, we can say that there are two systems at work, if not more. One is conscious and more or less linear; the other is unconscious and more or less parallel. When I talk about what Victor Mollo calls
seeing, it is the unconscious, parallel system that has done most of the work. (Old hat to a raja yogi, I suppose.) Now, when we talk about the calculation of variations, the conscious, linear system is what we have in mind. But both systems are always at work, and both require short term memory to do their job.
What I imagine go pros are doing when they read is to use a specialized workspace in their brains for both conscious and unconscious processing, including the requisite short term memory.
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Unless I've misunderstood, the classic fact about STM is that all of us are limited by what its discoverer Miller called "the magical number seven" - that is, we can only hold a maximum of about seven things in working memory at any one time. The reasons the number is magical are (1) that it applies to all of us with just rather rare exceptions who range between 5 and 9, and (2) the number is fixed - all the training in the world won't budge it significantly.
That holds up pretty well, I believe. However, I know that hypnosis can be used to stretch those limits. Also, it would not necessarily apply to a specialized workspace.
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It is of course possible to fool the STM (the magical version) by turning a long string of small things into a short (<8) string of larger things. Is that what you mean? (I call it 'chunking' but I don't know if that is a generally used term.)
{snip}
Assuming I haven't fallen off the track yet, it would seem to me that the most efficient go players are not those who have a larger working memory but rather those who are able to supplement their inherently small WM by being able readily to access ready-made chunks in long-term memory.
Well, I am willing to let pros fend for themselves. As for the rest of us, I think that learning chunks is a great idea.

I also think that the combination of concentration and relaxation can enable us to do more than we think we can.
