http://mindhacks.com/2010/10/11/the-unconscious-expert/
Food for thought.
Raja yoga, anyone?
Well, the same should go for chess, and expertise seems to be a factor. Isn't there chess research that shows that, given a problem position, chess masters immediately looked at the right answer while average players did not? OC, that is not the result of conscious processing, but neither is it the result of extended unconscious processing. So it is not conclusive, but it does indicate the importance of unconscious processing.Monadology wrote:In Go, at least, I'd think it would be much easier to deliberately orient yourself with conscious thought since you are effectively doing a very concrete form of calculation. Sports match prediction, on the other hand, is a lot more vague and nebulous than, say, a life and death problem. It probably is easy to get misguided by irrelevant factors, or give relevant factors too much or too little weight.
I wasn't trying to suggest that unconscious processing wasn't significant in Go. I was only pointing out that unlike in match prediction, I doubt that conscious processing is going to make things worse most of the time.Bill Spight wrote:Well, the same should go for chess, and expertise seems to be a factor. Isn't there chess research that shows that, given a problem position, chess masters immediately looked at the right answer while average players did not? OC, that is not the result of conscious processing, but neither is it the result of extended unconscious processing. So it is not conclusive, but it does indicate the importance of unconscious processing.Monadology wrote:In Go, at least, I'd think it would be much easier to deliberately orient yourself with conscious thought since you are effectively doing a very concrete form of calculation. Sports match prediction, on the other hand, is a lot more vague and nebulous than, say, a life and death problem. It probably is easy to get misguided by irrelevant factors, or give relevant factors too much or too little weight.
My interpretation of the results was not that conscious processing made things worse, but that it was not as good as unconscious processing. (I still think that raja yoga is right, but doing, say, 1 minute of conscious thought on the problem followed by 1 minute on the memory task was not one of the experimental options.)Monadology wrote:I wasn't trying to suggest that unconscious processing wasn't significant in Go. I was only pointing out that unlike in match prediction, I doubt that conscious processing is going to make things worse most of the time.