The Chess Cognition Podcast

Prof. Christopher Chabris - What Cognitive Science Says About Chess Thinking 🎙️ [No Board Needed]

May 3, 2025
Join cognitive scientist and chess candidate master Christopher Chabris as he dives into the cognitive challenges chess players face. He explains concepts like inattentional blindness and how they lead to missed opportunities on the board. Chabris offers practical strategies for enhancing decision-making, including a structured 'blunder check' approach. He also discusses cognitive biases, such as overconfidence and the sunk cost fallacy, which can cloud judgment. Explore how memory can distort perceptions and learn to improve your chess through better awareness and critical thinking.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Inattentional and Change Blindness

  • Inattentional blindness causes players to miss obvious threats when focusing elsewhere.
  • Gradual change blindness makes slow color changes on a chessboard go unnoticed.
ADVICE

Categorizing Patterns to Remember

  • Use specific vocabulary like 'sniper bishop' to categorize and recall patterns.
  • Develop automatic recognition by initially practicing conscious naming and labeling.
ADVICE

Do a Comprehensive Blunder Check

  • Perform a structured blunder check by scanning the entire board consciously.
  • Stop impulsive moves and methodically evaluate candidate moves and opponent's threats.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app