Article (Journal/Review)
Questioning Chase and Simon's (1973) 'Perception in Chess': The 'experience recognition' hypothesis
Fecha
2010Registro en:
0732-118X
10.1016/j.newideapsych.2009.07.008
2-s2.0-70350575745
Autor
Linhares, Alexandre
Freitas, Anna Elizabeth Tavares de Araújo
Institución
Resumen
Pattern recognition lies at the heart of the cognitive science endeavor. In this paper, we provide some criticism of this notion, using studies of chess as an example. The game of chess is, as significant evidence shows, a game of abstractions: pressures; force; open files and ranks; time; tightness of defense; old strategies rapidly adapted to new situations. These ideas do not arise on current computational models, which apply brute force by rote-memorization. In this paper we assess the computational models of CHREST and CHUMP, and argue that chess chunks must contain semantic information. This argument leads to a new and contrasting claim, as we propose that key conclusions of Chase and Simon's (1973) influential study stemmed from a non-sequitur. In the concluding section, we propose a shift in philosophy, from 'pattern recognition' to a framework of 'experience recognition'. © 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.