Whenever a player thinks for an extortionate time they then always do the wrong thing
#1
Posted 2004-November-08, 14:29
I have found it to be the case - whenever a player goes into the think tank, they inevitably then emerge with the wrong card (or bid).
So I will ask the "experts" - why do you think so long when it obviously doesn't help?
#2
Posted 2004-November-08, 14:52
EarlPurple, on Nov 8 2004, 03:29 PM, said:
I have found it to be the case - whenever a player goes into the think tank, they inevitably then emerge with the wrong card (or bid).
So I will ask the "experts" - why do you think so long when it obviously doesn't help?
I'm not sure that applies to experts.
Somebody like me, I've already considered everything I can think of in about 2 minutes. Everything else is repetition, or 'rechecking', and I often get confused at that point about what I was certain about earlier.
But it's easy for me to believe that real experts can spend 10 minutes checking lines I wouldn't consider, or every possibility in a hand where my brain simply isn't that big. It's like chess- I can't imagine seriously studying a position for hours. I might study it for five minutes, go away (mentally) for 10, and them come back to look at it afresh. But I couldn't even concentrate on it for that long. But real experts can.
#3
Posted 2004-November-08, 15:02
I think what you are seeing is thinking occurs at the critical part of the hand, so there is more chances to go wrong there. Nothing more than that.
#4
Posted 2004-November-08, 15:21
#5
Posted 2004-November-08, 15:56
I'd say that more poor plays are made due to lack of study, then overstudying a decision, however.
#6
Posted 2004-November-08, 16:04
Other than that, long thinking spells usually result in the wrong play by overly considering false evidence.
My rule (when I remember): If you are not calculating something, your first instinct is usually your best.
#7
Posted 2004-November-08, 16:04
#8
Posted 2004-November-08, 19:29
#9
Posted 2004-November-09, 03:45
luke warm, on Nov 8 2004, 08:29 PM, said:
Jimmy that not the only thing about you that makes me , and perhaps the rest of the world , 'antsy'
where the hell did you get that word 'antsy' ????
Some Beginners Guide to Entomology or sumtin???
Sloffy
#10
Posted 2004-November-09, 05:12
At he beginning of the board, probabilistic part totally dominates. You hold your cards and each of LHO, CHO, RHO can have any cards remaining. Typically, the nature of problems remains strongly probabilistic during the bidding. You can be almost never sure that the slam you just bid is a good contract before you see dummy (and many times even after that). As a consequence, in my opinion, it is not very productive to spend ten minutes on solution whether to bid slam or not. Actually, in case of slam, it can be of some meaning, but definitely not in case of game. (By the way, your final result after ten minutes of thinking is, I am sure, mostly done by your psychological status just at the moment of the decision and many irracional factors may influence it)
During the second part of the game, you are declarer, or defender, the situation is different. Card after card, the probabilistic nature of potential problems shifts to the deterministic one. The problems start having finite number of solutions, some of them wrong, some of the good, some of them the best. Here, there is definitely time for long thinking, since you have something, you can and should really think about.
Jahol
#11
Posted 2004-November-10, 09:11
When I first played with one of them I was surprised that after very very deep thinking he finally solved most of the problems, when I was expecting him to fail as often happens with long thinkings , but the difference is they ALWAYS think deeply, not once in a while.
#12
Posted 2004-November-10, 10:25
Does anyone else feel this? In addition to time moving faster, you have to deal with "are you there? " from the table, so you can't think as well
#13
Posted 2004-November-10, 10:39
#14
Posted 2004-November-10, 11:20
to address an issue of UI
after a long hesitation.
His addressed the problem with the comment,
"Don't spoil a good game by thinking!"
Ironically there is something deep and philosophical
about his whimsical retort.
#15
Posted 2004-November-10, 12:52
slothy, on Nov 9 2004, 11:45 AM, said:
Some Beginners Guide to Entomology or sumtin???
Sloffy
heheh... think it means 'nervousness felt by british soldiers during the battle for new orleans in 1814, when confronted with the intellectual and physical superiority of the american soldier'
course i could be wrong
uday said:
absolutely, and it's a shame... what i hate the most is the advertisements in the lobby for players, especially the ones that say 'fast expert players needed'... give me a break... watch the real experts play (to win)... they're as fast as they need to be, and quite often that's pretty slow
#16 Guest_Jlall_*
Posted 2004-November-10, 14:11
#17
Posted 2004-November-10, 18:39
#18
Posted 2004-November-11, 01:49
"The slowness of genius is hard to bear, but the slowness of mediocrity is intolerable".
My partner likes to say "If you're going to make a mistake, at least make it quickly"
Last night, our opps were playing in 3NT after my partner had opened a weak NT (thus placing all the points). Dummy had 5♥ to the AT and 3♠ to the Ace but no other high cards. Declarer tries to set up the ♥ (he had a doubleton), and partner gets in and swithces to ♠K from Kxx - A Merrimac coup! Declarer immediately takes dummy's Ace, but because the ♥ don't break, he has no entry to the long ♥. Now he stops and thinks for a fair while, but still misses the obvious throw-in on partner and drifts 1 off.
Now this is a guy who really loves his bridge, plays every night of the week, and has done so for many years. But I have no idea what he is thinking about when he lapses into thought. It certainly isn't about the earlier tricks, becasue even after the hand he didn't realise he could simply have ducked ♠K.
Eric
#19
Posted 2004-November-11, 07:42
luke warm, on Nov 10 2004, 01:52 PM, said:
course i could be wrong
Well, if it were true, Jimmy Boy, i can only say that all the proDarwinian theorists will be faced with a certain contradiction
The only reason why Americans pepper conversation wiz ze Alamo (nothing to do with this but i want to make a certain point) is coz its one of the few battles they have little difficuty in spelling...
Sloofy
#20
Posted 2004-November-11, 08:01
Presumably, when making conscious decisions, people tend to employ irrelevant information (over-fitting their own experience, "resulting" in bridge jargon) and miscalculate probabilities. Surely intuitive probability calculations are not only faster but also more reliable than high-school math, except if we get the formulars right which most of us don't. It is also possible that reasoning is biased towards decisions that are not necesarily correct but easy to justify intellectually.