Elsevier

Cognitive Psychology

Volume 4, Issue 1, January 1973, Pages 55-81
Cognitive Psychology

Perception in chess

https://doi.org/10.1016/0010-0285(73)90004-2Get rights and content

Abstract

This paper develops a technique for isolating and studying the perceptual structures that chess players perceive. Three chess players of varying strength — from master to novice — were confronted with two tasks: (1) A perception task, where the player reproduces a chess position in plain view, and (2) de Groot's (1965) short-term recall task, where the player reproduces a chess position after viewing it for 5 sec. The successive glances at the position in the perceptual task and long pauses in the memory task were used to segment the structures in the reconstruction protocol. The size and nature of these structures were then analyzed as a function of chess skill.

References (17)

  • G.H. Bower et al.

    Pauses as recoding points in letter series

    Journal of Experimental Psychology

    (1970)
  • D. Dansereau

    An information processing model of mental multiplication

    (1969)
  • A.D. De Groot
  • A.D. De Groot

    Perception and memory versus thought: Some old ideas and recent findings

  • P. Ein-Dor

    Elements of a theory of visual information processing

    (1971)
  • P.M. Fitts et al.
  • R.W. Jongman
  • T.K. Landauer

    Rate of implicit speech

    Perceptual and Motor Skills

    (1962)
There are more references available in the full text version of this article.

Cited by (0)

This work was supported by Public Health Service Research Grant MH-07722 from the National Institute of Mental Health.

View full text