The Role of Emotion in Problem Solving: First Results from Observing Chess
ICMI 2018 - Workshop at 20th ACM International Conference on Multimodal Interaction, Oct 2018, Boulder, Colorado, United States. pp.1-13 In this paper we present results from recent experiments that suggest that chess players associate emotions to game situations and reactively use these association...
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Zusammenfassung: | ICMI 2018 - Workshop at 20th ACM International Conference on
Multimodal Interaction, Oct 2018, Boulder, Colorado, United States. pp.1-13 In this paper we present results from recent experiments that suggest that
chess players associate emotions to game situations and reactively use these
associations to guide search for planning and problem solving. We describe the
design of an instrument for capturing and interpreting multimodal signals of
humans engaged in solving challenging problems. We review results from a pilot
experiment with human experts engaged in solving challenging problems in Chess
that revealed an unexpected observation of rapid changes in emotion as players
attempt to solve challenging problems. We propose a cognitive model that
describes the process by which subjects select chess chunks for use in
interpretation of the game situation and describe initial results from a second
experiment designed to test this model. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1810.11094 |