Study links intelligence and chess skill

Sort:
ArgoNavis
stuzzicadenti wrote:

when I was younger everyone said I was one of the smartest in my school, now I am an adult and none of that has helped me, I found out to be just average.

Was that after or before you became a pervert?

u0110001101101000
motherinlaw wrote:

Finally, at long last, we reach consensus on this astounding finding from Post # 1

 "Intelligence—and not just relentless practice—plays a significant role in determining chess skill"  

Yep.  And tallness helps basketball players.  And vision's a Big asset in archery.  Equally true:  playing basketball doesn't make you taller and shooting lots of arrows doesn't give you better vision.

Excellent discussion of my silly little essay test (add 10 points for whimsy)!  

Yeah, just another "study finds evidence for something that's intuitively true"

OAlienChessO

Intelligence is 0verrated,  the sheep people work hard uselessly to be m0re intelligent ,   t0 kn0w more information like when obama was born 0r the einstein formula ,  culture sucks, forget ab0ut intelligence , ,   the wisdom is f0r the freethinker .  

IamBaldrick
kingofshedinjas wrote:
stuzzicadenti wrote:

when I was younger everyone said I was one of the smartest in my school, now I am an adult and none of that has helped me, I found out to be way below average.

Was that after or before you became a pervert?

Corrected for typos.

u0110001101101000

Jerald Times, a master and chess coach at the elite Dalton School on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, said, “I believe grandmaster is more an economic measurement than an intellectual one."

https://worldchess.com/2015/12/15/the-racial-gap-for-titles-among-american-players/

ap_resurrection

seems pretty obvious there is some link - most kids who seem to stand out at ches also seem to be good at math, school etc - not always but that seems to be the case often

 

of course those kinds of conclusions wont be popular as the dream that anyone can be a GM keeps a lot of people going

whacula

Hi Coach,

I found this study very informative in its recognition of cognitive abilities relative to the art of playing chess. I have a question for you and which I would value your opinion on this subject, I would like to preface the question with a comment first and ask for your critical insight. While I consider cognitive ability crucial to the game of chess, I think the non-cognitive abilities at least equally important. When I say non-cognitive, I mean the value of perseverance, diligence, emotion, practice and just plain sheer will to succeed and play well. Do you think these play a part in this game and may even to some limited degree preclude intelligence? Thank you in advance for your comments. -Harry

pauljacobson

Hi!

I want to recommend my app for you guys, it is called: Brain Training Chess, It is a chess working memory game designed to increase IQ etc. It is available in the appstore now and costs only 2,99 dollars. I have many years of experience in brain training and I really think this app is one of the best brain training applications out there. If you have any feedback or questions about the app just ask away.

 

Best regards,

 

Paul Jacobson

Smositional
PlayChessPoorly wrote:
Didn't someone post a link to another study that said the opposite recently?

It's always the same pathetic crap. Every year another super hero scientist conducts a pointless study that should refute the previous one. This year a study said that smoking is detrimental to your health. WOW Mind blown, MIND BLOWN

TheHarderTheyFall

anyone who has any experience with tournament chess, where you interact with other players about things other than chess, knows the answer to this. really, how could it be otherwise?

i suspect that even being really good at some sport ups the odds that you are exceptionally intelligent. ironically, a really good boxer is likely to be a very intelligent person; if they quit soon enough, they might manage to keep some of those iq points.

nDie_Zatoichi

Torn from the pages of the medical journal "Duh!"...