It is currently Thu Mar 28, 2024 12:29 pm

All times are UTC - 8 hours [ DST ]




Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 42 posts ]  Go to page 1, 2, 3  Next
Author Message
Offline
 Post subject: Depth of reading correlates with rank - and other insights
Post #1 Posted: Thu Jul 14, 2011 7:53 am 
Oza

Posts: 3647
Liked others: 20
Was liked: 4626
There was an interesting series of articles in the late 90s in Igo Kansai in which an amateur working on programming go gave a long account of the insights he had thus gleaned into improving in real go. As a measure of how interesting it is, it runs for almost a year, over several pages each issue, and is almost solid text. In my experience, it is utterly exceptional for an amateur to be given such space in a major magazine. In fact, it is exceedingly rare to be given even one page in one issue. Clearly, someone in charge thought the ideas were worth airing, and I for one totally agree.

Without going into detail, but also with me adding my own take to some extent, a couple of sections were of special interest to me because they touched on subjects that I myself have tried to highlight (not just here but in the "From the GoGoD Archives" books) as being concepts that have not been properly taken on board in the west (I mean qua concept - I'm not saying there are no westerners who understand them).

One is bullying or ijime. Too many western teachers just promote the idea of getting stable groups with two eyes. Our programmer had a nice approach to this (indirectly) by introducing a new "proverb" - stop fighting only when there are three eyes. The important point is that stability as represented by two eyes in the early part of the game does not necessarily mean strength. The eyes at that stage are not likely to be well formed, even though they can be made easily in response to attack. In other words, they are virtual eyes. The trouble is that every time the opponent is attacking he is probably making a point or two profit. This is bullying. Unfortunately, in go, bullying often works. But if you have three eyes you are immune from bullying, because two of them act as miai. If the opponent threatens one he is a tempo behind - you ignore him, he takes that eye away, but you still have two left. In other words, when building positions you should be trying to make three-eye shapes rather than two-eye shapes.

The other concept is kakoi or surrounding. When I first mentioned this, some years ago, it inspired a very strong Korean amateur to remark that it was this concept that got him from 5-dan to 6-dan. It's rather hard to explain without diagrams, but our programmer (I'm avoiding his name because I can't be sure of the reading: his surname could be Eda, Echida, Etsuda, Koeda, Koshita, Koshida, Otsuda or Shiota - but Koshida is the most likely; his personal name is also slightly problematic but is probably Masatsune) points out that there are situations where there is essentially a choice between reducing the opponent's territory or increasing our own, and amateurs almost invariably choose reduction (in the widest sense, not just keshi). The main reason is that this can be done in one move, and a move that the opponent has to answer, and we all know there's nothing more potent than the drug sentepezam. But surrounding (kakoi) usually takes (or appears to take) several moves. Kakoi is indeed harder, but it doesn't really have to take several moves. If you can engineer play in a certain way you can do kakoi in a single move (there are examples in the GoGoD Go Seigen books), and the benefits are considerable. A reducing move eliminates bad aji for the opponent and in some circumstances may create a burdensome reducing group of your own. It does not give you any territory. But a well-engineered kakoi move gives you territory, eliminates bad aji in your area and has no downside. It may give your opponent sente, but you can't have that all the time.

Koshida (let it be that) does not talk only about 6-dan stuff. He indicates also that teaching at beginner level could be improved immeasurably by teaching people to work like machines and count liberties more. (Bruce Wilcox made a similar pitch, and in fact his Instant Go series was a similar interesting spin-off from computer research.) But in what I've seen, few beginners are in fact taught to check the liberty situation beyond ataris, ladders and nets.

There is one long section on a topic that was discussed here very recently - which is better: a big point or an urgent move. Koshida regards the proverb as problematical, at least from a computer's point of view, though he does give mini-algorithms for identifying both big points and urgent points.

Naturally enough, given the programming background, he also talks about depth of reading. He suggests that there is a direct correlation between go strength and how deep we usually choose to read. On that basis, he gives the follwoing table (moves = ply):

3 moves = 10 kyu
5 moves = 6 kyu
7 moves = 3 kyu
10 moves = 1-dan
13 moves = 3-dan
15 moves = 5-dan

That feels about right to me, but (in other sections) Koshida brings in two other important ideas that modify this. For one he invented his own word: girichon. This is presumably a portmanteau word from girigiri and chon (like smog = smoke + fog). It will mean something like "down to the wire". He did this to stress the point that fighting is a down-to-the-wire affair. You can't just stop halfway through. That seems obvious to the point of triteness, yet I think very many of us don't fight that way. E.g. in our reading we reach a point where we spot a nice shape for us and stop there. It's not entirely stupid - it's a sort of probablistic way of playing, i.e. a position with good shape in it is more likely to favour us eventually. But it's probably not as good as digging even deeper. The ideal is to establish not just that you have an attractive position, but that you actually finish ahead of your opponent.

The other Koshida point is that, as a measure of go strength, the difference between two players can probably be determined best in how they each evaluate any two moves. The one who can discriminate better between the two is the stronger player. That may seem obvious, but there is a touch of Columbus's egg about it, and I don't think it takes a huge amount of humility to realise that too many of us don't even try to discriminate very well. We often tend to find just one plus point (e.g. that old standby good shape) and stop there. Maybe more practice in rattling off a series of evaluations checks - like a computer - could pay big dividends.

No Mickey Mice were harmed in the making of this coffee-break entertainment.


This post by John Fairbairn was liked by 33 people: Akura, betterlife, Boidhre, Bonobo, Chew Terr, crux, daal, Darrell, dfan, ez4u, gasana, gowan, illluck, jdl, kirkmc, Koosh, Li Kao, malweth, Marcus, onou1, perceval, PeterHB, phrax, rubin427, shapenaji, snorri, Splatted, SpongeBob, topazg, Tryphon, tundra, xed_over, Zombie
Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Depth of reading correlates with rank - and other insigh
Post #2 Posted: Thu Jul 14, 2011 9:25 am 
Lives in sente

Posts: 706
Liked others: 252
Was liked: 251
GD Posts: 846
As usual, excellent post, John! Thanks for taking the time to summarize.

I wonder if reading and the tendency to reduce/invade rather than expand are correlated. There is (at least in Western teaching) a kind of semi-proverb that it's easier to live than to kill. (Or easier to defend than to attack.) To kill, your reading has to be pretty precise and complete, because the player trying live usually has many options even if these are self-damaging plays.

The potentially self-damaging but living plays are easier to find in blitz games that amateurs play so much. Killing sequences take time and more reading. As reading skill gets better and players get stronger, though, maybe it balances out more because reading passes some kind of theshold.

I agree that there is sente addiction, though. :D Reductions and invasion, though, are often sente now / gote later affairs, so the initial feeling of sente-ness may be misleading.

Guo Juan 5p, for one, usually does teach that in the case of competing moyos, the side that is bigger should prefer to expand, whereas the side smaller should try to reduce or invade. But your amateur author may be talking about more than just moyos. Maybe you can clarify?

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Depth of reading correlates with rank - and other insigh
Post #3 Posted: Thu Jul 14, 2011 11:10 am 
Honinbo

Posts: 9545
Liked others: 1600
Was liked: 1711
KGS: Kirby
Tygem: 커비라고해
Interesting post (ignoring "Mickey Mice", who I'm beginning to hate :-p). For some reason, this discussion reminds me of a quote from the popular, "Catching Scent of Victory". I don't recall the exact wording, but it was something along the lines of, 'Playing White 23 immediately, and playing the same move after an hour of thought may seem to produce the same result, but in actuality, there is a world of difference'.

I think that part of reading strength is not only producing a good result in a single move, but the consideration given to that move, even if it ends up being what appears, on the surface, to be obvious.

Regarding the point of evaluating different moves, I find that in my own play, sometimes my goals are off-track. Recently, a stronger player told me not to attack to kill, but to attack to maximize profit. Though this sounds easy to do, I do not follow this advice. My goal is to kill the opponent, periodically at the expense of the game result.

In this sense, even if I read some number of plys down, I will typically select the option that brings me closest to killing the opponent, even if it doesn't seem to work.

_________________
be immersed


This post by Kirby was liked by: ez4u
Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Depth of reading correlates with rank - and other insigh
Post #4 Posted: Thu Jul 14, 2011 11:13 am 
Gosei
User avatar

Posts: 2116
Location: Silicon Valley
Liked others: 152
Was liked: 330
Rank: 2d AGA
GD Posts: 1193
KGS: lavalamp
Tygem: imapenguin
IGS: lavalamp
OGS: daniel_the_smith
Kirby wrote:
My goal is to kill the opponent, periodically at the expense of the game result.


It's waaay more fun to kill a big group than to win the game. :twisted:

_________________
That which can be destroyed by the truth should be.
--
My (sadly neglected, but not forgotten) project: http://dailyjoseki.com


This post by daniel_the_smith was liked by 3 people: Akura, Kirby, Li Kao
Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Depth of reading correlates with rank - and other insigh
Post #5 Posted: Thu Jul 14, 2011 11:16 am 
Gosei
User avatar

Posts: 1848
Location: Bellevue, WA
Liked others: 90
Was liked: 837
Rank: AGA 5d
KGS: Capsule 4d
Tygem: 치킨까스 5d
John Fairbairn wrote:
13 moves = 3-dan
15 moves = 5-dan

Image


This post by Solomon was liked by 2 people: Akura, ez4u
Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Depth of reading correlates with rank - and other insigh
Post #6 Posted: Thu Jul 14, 2011 1:15 pm 
Dies with sente
User avatar

Posts: 121
Location: Lyndhurst, New Jersey
Liked others: 44
Was liked: 10
GD Posts: 109
KGS: lovely
Tygem: imsohot
I was reading about Benjamin Teuber's time in Korea last night and came across something interesting.

From Day 7

Quote:
The day began with Mr. Kwon's lessons. It was a game commentary of two famous professional players, Yamashita Keigo 9p and Ch'oe Ch'eol-han 9p. This game was played the day before, with Ch'oe winning by 1,5 points.

Certainly the technical aspect of the game was very interesting, but it was again the "other stuff", which we found more impressive. He emphasized the "fight" and the "endgame" in Go.

He said that modern Go no longer has any formal josekis or fusekis. Instead, the modern players decide to fight from the first move, especially the modern players like Yi Se-tol 9p or Ch'oe Ch'eol-han 9p. Therefore, he added, outstanding reading qualities are absolutely necessary to become great professional players. This reading skill give the modern (Korean) players the "power" which the Japanese players are desperately missing.


Looking at the latest Honinbo match and all the fighting between Hane and Yamashita, perhaps they've got a clue that go isn't all about shapes anymore. The 1 geup (we play on 7 stones (I've beaten him once by 2 points and lost our last game by 4), so I would venture to say he's a classic 1 geup (in that he's close to pro strength) and not just a 1 geup based on the other players strength) at the go salon I go to (Master Song) said something equally as interesting that really got me thinking: "Go is a game about fighting, not building houses!".

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Depth of reading correlates with rank - and other insigh
Post #7 Posted: Fri Jul 15, 2011 9:21 pm 
Lives with ko
User avatar

Posts: 180
Liked others: 6
Was liked: 4
but building house for the troop to rest isn't a bad idea

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Depth of reading correlates with rank - and other insigh
Post #8 Posted: Sat Jul 16, 2011 12:34 pm 
Lives in gote
User avatar

Posts: 614
Liked others: 28
Was liked: 65
Rank: 1 Kyu KGS
KGS: Numsgil
The "problem" is that if your opponent wants a fighting game it's hard to force the game to become a moyo game! Or a territory game. Whereas if your opponent wants to play a territory game it's not that hard to force it to become a fighting game.

Or if there is a way I haven't seen it :P

_________________
1k KGS

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Depth of reading correlates with rank - and other insigh
Post #9 Posted: Sat Jul 16, 2011 12:56 pm 
Honinbo

Posts: 10905
Liked others: 3651
Was liked: 3374
Numsgil wrote:
The "problem" is that if your opponent wants a fighting game it's hard to force the game to become a moyo game! Or a territory game. Whereas if your opponent wants to play a territory game it's not that hard to force it to become a fighting game.

Or if there is a way I haven't seen it :P


Who says that a moyo game is not a fighting game? :)

In a sense, every game is a fighting game because you have to be prepared to fight. But that does not mean that you have to fight.

Tenuki is always an option. :mrgreen:

_________________
The Adkins Principle:
At some point, doesn't thinking have to go on?
— Winona Adkins

Visualize whirled peas.

Everything with love. Stay safe.


This post by Bill Spight was liked by 4 people: Akura, dust, gaius, topazg
Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Depth of reading correlates with rank - and other insigh
Post #10 Posted: Sat Jul 16, 2011 3:38 pm 
Gosei

Posts: 1625
Liked others: 542
Was liked: 450
Rank: senior player
GD Posts: 1000
lovely wrote:
I was reading about Benjamin Teuber's time in Korea last night and came across something interesting.

From Day 7

Quote:
The day began with Mr. Kwon's lessons. It was a game commentary of two famous professional players, Yamashita Keigo 9p and Ch'oe Ch'eol-han 9p. This game was played the day before, with Ch'oe winning by 1,5 points.

Certainly the technical aspect of the game was very interesting, but it was again the "other stuff", which we found more impressive. He emphasized the "fight" and the "endgame" in Go.

He said that modern Go no longer has any formal josekis or fusekis. Instead, the modern players decide to fight from the first move, especially the modern players like Yi Se-tol 9p or Ch'oe Ch'eol-han 9p. Therefore, he added, outstanding reading qualities are absolutely necessary to become great professional players. This reading skill give the modern (Korean) players the "power" which the Japanese players are desperately missing.


Looking at the latest Honinbo match and all the fighting between Hane and Yamashita, perhaps they've got a clue that go isn't all about shapes anymore. The 1 geup (we play on 7 stones (I've beaten him once by 2 points and lost our last game by 4), so I would venture to say he's a classic 1 geup (in that he's close to pro strength) and not just a 1 geup based on the other players strength) at the go salon I go to (Master Song) said something equally as interesting that really got me thinking: "Go is a game about fighting, not building houses!".


Whether you "fight" or not, go is still a game of building houses. The reason is that at the end of the game the player with the most territory (=houses) wins. Yes go is also a game about fighting, but as Bill Spight points out fighting happens in many ways: moyo vs. moyo is still a contest (=fight) as is a contest of small groups in which subtle maneuvers take place to end up with more houses, as is a chaotic battle. We've all seen martial arts movies where one fighter charges wildly at the other only to be felled by a single blow. I think a lot of amateurs think that good go equals wild fighting. Yi Chang'ho plays a quiet game yet defeats the wild fighters. In order to win wild fights you undoubtedly need reading skill but you also need a subtle mastery of go technique. Finally, saying that go isn't about shape shows ignorance because without making good shape (part of haengma) you can't win fights.

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Depth of reading correlates with rank - and other insigh
Post #11 Posted: Sun Jul 17, 2011 12:50 am 
Dies with sente
User avatar

Posts: 86
Location: Toronto, ON, CA
Liked others: 18
Was liked: 16
Rank: CGA 6 Dan
GD Posts: 498
KGS: Invader, gilgil
Online playing schedule: Teaching, tournaments, and CGL (UofT)
Gowan's post and others: I think saying "Go is a game of fighting" is just Korean for "stop being so submissive just because you don't want to read difficult things." The only reason fighting ever happens is because of disputes over houses. If you don't pay the rent, the landlord comes in with a katana. Or a broom. Or a tooth pick. Depends on their power. Lee Changho will bring in some food or a ps3 to keep you busy and satisfied, steal something small, possibly a penny, and leave.

The only reason killing ever happens is 1: sacrifice. for territory! 2: misread or neglecting one's group... ... ...because of needing territory!

My style is very territorial, but who says that's not a fighting style? In the past I was VERY territorial, and later fighting in the center was disadvantageous for me but I had more cash. This means I must have been confident in my fighting power because i gave my opponent the handicap of influence/thickness for the fighting. Fighting could be anything from reducing to killing to invading/...many things!

Many amateur players, especially a lot of older korean go club people (the ones below 6d) have a false sense about Go. Fighting spirit is not about fighting because la-di-da. Fighting is to get 0.5+ more out of the situation! Fighting when peace is an equal option is also fine, but stupid if peaceful option is better, which it still probably is with more than half of the moves of most games.

@Araban: love your post! haha

I've been waiting to say this, read everything on this page.

5 dan = 15 moves? WRONG.... Sorry. The majority of the post content was really interesting and i enjoyed reading everything, im even going to favourite this particilar thread page, but ths rank-moves thing was way off.

I won't argue about the moves shown for the kyu levels, which looks believable and is not something I remember well, but the Dan levels were way off. 1d are usually not great at reading, so sure. But 3d can usually read more than 13 moves... one of the biggest differences between 3d and 1d is reading, but even more so... um, 5d can read at least double of what is posted there (15 moves). it would be quite sad if a player went from 3d to 5d and only improved his reading by 2 moves. the thing is, if we take one of those people who go through the ranks fast, like 1d in one year for example. all 30 kyu levels then take a year, but how long does 2d take? usually at least half a year I believe. each dan rank is almost like another 20-30 kyu levels in terms of improving time. I've never gone up a Dan in less then 3-4 months, and even then it was because I happened to have an epiphany or two shortly after the previous 1-up. Although 5d when playing online, in my experience, usually dont read more than 15-20, we can read up to 35-50 if the situation is not too ambiguous. And you know, even then, im not confident i can solve 5-6d problems in real games... I struggle with them outside of games...

The reading difference between each Dan is going to be at least 5..

mind you, i dont know what ranks we're talking about. im thinking of 5d as kgs 5d or tygem 7-8d (which to me seem similar).

_________________
Experienced Go Teacher: http://ygami.blogspot.ca/2014/02/teaching.html
Check out my Go content, fiction stories, anime talk and more @ http://ygami.blogspot.ca
"Go Explained" series! http://ygami.blogspot.ca/search/label/go%20explained


This post by Alakazam was liked by 2 people: gaius, logan
Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Depth of reading correlates with rank - and other insigh
Post #12 Posted: Sun Jul 17, 2011 1:13 am 
Gosei
User avatar

Posts: 2011
Location: Groningen, NL
Liked others: 202
Was liked: 1087
Rank: Dutch 4D
GD Posts: 645
Universal go server handle: herminator
Alakazam wrote:
5 dan = 15 moves? WRONG.... Sorry. The majority of the post content was really interesting and i enjoyed reading everything, im even going to favourite this particilar thread page, but ths rank-moves thing was way off.

Although 5d when playing online, in my experience, usually dont read more than 15-20, we can read up to 35-50 if the situation is not too ambiguous. And you know, even then, im not confident i can solve 5-6d problems in real games... I struggle with them outside of games...

The reading difference between each Dan is going to be at least 5..


Nonsense. Yes, sure, anyone can read a ladder 50 moves deep, but that's not the point. This is about reading out all the reasonable variations to that level in complex fighting.

In Nakayama's "The Treasure Chest Enigma", he describes a scene where Kitani Minoru comments after the game about a certain move that he looked at it, and it turns into ko. None of the present professionals have a clue what ko he's talking about, until he shows, to their amazement, a sequence of 37 moves that leads to a ko in the corner.

So 37 moves is amazing to a group of professionals, but you can read 35-50? Right.

Here's a straightforward life and death problem. No variation is longer than 15 moves, as there is simply not enough space for that many moves. Tell me how long it took you?

Click Here To Show Diagram Code
[go]$$B Black to play and kill.
$$ --------------
$$ | . . . . . . .
$$ | . X X X X . .
$$ | . . O . . . .
$$ | . . O X X . .
$$ | . . O O X . .
$$ | . . . O . . .
$$ | . . . O . X .
$$ | . O O O X . .
$$ | . X X X . X .
$$ | . . . , . . .
$$ | . X . . . . .
$$ | . . . . . . .[/go]

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Depth of reading correlates with rank - and other insigh
Post #13 Posted: Sun Jul 17, 2011 1:28 am 
Oza

Posts: 3647
Liked others: 20
Was liked: 4626
Alakazam: Herman's made the point in one way. Let me make it in another way. The article said the number of moves was "how deep we usually choose to read", not "can read". "Can read" in fact has another meaning, which seems applicable here :)

But the point about fighting is spot on. Many people choose to confuse fighting with power go: if you can cut, cut; if you can defend; invade; if you can make a 100-point territory, kill five stones. Fighting is a necessary skill for all go players. The only debates are about when and where to start it. Amongst amateurs, power go is a personality defect.

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Depth of reading correlates with rank - and other insigh
Post #14 Posted: Sun Jul 17, 2011 1:49 am 
Judan

Posts: 6087
Liked others: 0
Was liked: 786
re John:

A need for three potential eyes is only a special case. Rather much more generally, there is a need for being at least 1-alive (see Joseki Vol. 2 Strategy, p.64), i.e. having the option of playing at least 1 time elsewhere before an attack has to be answered.

I do not agree that amateurs would invariable choose reduction over enhancement. Rather many kyu players have a tendency for either and do not dare to do the other or they fail to reflect the alternative at all. I teach that the bigger effect on territory differences per invested excess stone, the bigger of reduction versus enhancement should be chosen. - It is not the 5d to 6d killer concept: I apply it but apparently I am missing something else for 6d.

Overall, I do not see that in the west the concepts would be missing. They are there and even in much greater generality but they are not generally spread here yet.

re snorri:

Guo's approach that the bigger side should expand while the smaller side should reduce the opponent is also simplifying. Again, difference of both players' territory changes on a per excess move basis matters.

re All:

Reading depth of a 5d: John appears to have meant an average depth of interesting moves. 15 is not that bad a guess. Some moves are so obvious; reading depth 1 suffices. So an average of 15 might actually be about right. It does mean though that often a 5d reads MUCH deeper, although he does so, of course, SELECTIVELY.

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Depth of reading correlates with rank - and other insigh
Post #15 Posted: Sun Jul 17, 2011 2:13 am 
Lives in sente
User avatar

Posts: 1072
Location: Stratford-upon-Avon, England
Liked others: 33
Was liked: 72
Rank: 5K KGS
GD Posts: 1165
KGS: Dogen
snorri wrote:

I wonder if reading and the tendency to reduce/invade rather than expand are correlated.


I would say that counting should replace reading in your statement. I think that's a big difference between strong players and the rest of us; they can count, and they can know whether expanding or reducing is appropriate at any given point.

_________________
My blog about Macs and more: Kirkville

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Depth of reading correlates with rank - and other insigh
Post #16 Posted: Sun Jul 17, 2011 4:30 am 
Oza

Posts: 3647
Liked others: 20
Was liked: 4626
I'll add a little more. The purpose of this addition is to highlight a point that is sometimes overlooked: western players often interpret Japanese proverbs/concepts in an idiosyncratic way. It's conceivable that it's a better way sometimes, but it's usually wise to have take heed of how the native speakers view the proverbs/concepts. We had a debate elsewhere on L19 recently about the proverb "urgent points before big points". I was rather startled at some of the assertions made.

Anyway, Koshida provides some insight into how one native mind thinks on this. He divides a position up into five phases: extreme urgency; urgency; soba; big points; boundary plays (yose). Moves are to be chosen according to this ranking.

Moves of extreme urgency are moves to do with life and death of a whole group. You cannot play elsewhere.

Urgent moves are moves where opposing groups are in contact and if you choose to play elsewhere you lose some stones.

Soba moves he simply describes as moves where you cannot play away from this area. The further sense is built into the word itself, so I'll add that it's a kind of fighting where you are simply striving to achieve par. You are not giving ground, but nor are you expecting to gain it. It's difficult to leave this area prematurely lest you end up on the backfoot, but it's a phase of play where application of enough tactical skill may at least give you sente.

Big points are played in a phase where you feel you can play elsewhere and you have a free choice for your next move. He gives some pointers to identify specific urgent moves and big points which I'll omit here, but he does stress that neglect of urgent moves is not just a matter of stones being captured but of changing the relationship between the two sides (a group becomes vulnerable, so it can be attacked or bullied later). I.e. the bills have to be paid later.

Boundary plays are plays made when there is no fighting to be done or big points to be occupied.

You can decide for yourself whether this implies significant differences from the views elsewhere on L19 (I think it does), but soba is probably a new element in the mix for many. Soba go is rather like par golf. You can try for birdies (e.g. get sente), but if you try too hard you can card a bogie. Some players tend to play par go all the time and rely on an impetuous opponent to land in the water. Some players, like Yi Se-tol, play like Ballesteros and try for birdies from impossible-looking positions, but have enough skill to succeed often enough to win the titles ahead of the par-golf plodders.

Nevertheless, even Yi Se-tol and Tiger Woods realise that on some holes you need to rein back and be satisfied with par. How many amateurs genuinely think that way during a game and actually show such patience? In golf, if you are an amateur, you have a measure - you need ten strokes on a hole rated 4 and you know you're a little way off being a pro. On the go board we lack these par numbers and so it's easy to forget just how far from par we really are. Actually I'm aiming that remark at amateur high-dans more than DDKs.

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Depth of reading correlates with rank - and other insigh
Post #17 Posted: Sun Jul 17, 2011 5:49 am 
Judan

Posts: 6087
Liked others: 0
Was liked: 786
John Fairbairn wrote:
Moves of extreme urgency are moves to do with life and death of a whole group. You cannot play elsewhere.


Of course, one can play elsewhere, e.g., if elsewhere a bigger group is also unsettled.

Quote:
Urgent moves are moves where opposing groups are in contact and if you choose to play elsewhere you lose some stones.


It is a special case example of an urgent move rather than what should be considered urgent of a second highest degree in general.

Quote:
he does stress that neglect of urgent moves is not just a matter of stones being captured but of changing the relationship between the two sides [...]
Boundary plays are plays made when there is no fighting to be done or big points to be occupied.


This is becoming more reasonable.

Quote:
On the go board we lack these par numbers and so it's easy to forget just how far from par we really are. Actually I'm aiming that remark at amateur high-dans more than DDKs.


Eh? We have positional judgement with its numbers for territories, influence and thickness. Amateur high dans do use (at least some of) them. So why would you be saying they are far from "par"? It is more the DDKs that are.

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Depth of reading correlates with rank - and other insigh
Post #18 Posted: Sun Jul 17, 2011 6:01 am 
Lives in gote
User avatar

Posts: 325
Location: The shores of sunny Clapham
Liked others: 1
Was liked: 283
GD Posts: 484
Reminds me of the comment by Go Seigen, that someone was a very weak player - around 5dan amateur.

Best wishes.

_________________
No aji, keshi, kifu or kikashi has been harmed in the compiling of this post.
http://www.gogod.co.uk

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Depth of reading correlates with rank - and other insigh
Post #19 Posted: Sun Jul 17, 2011 6:47 am 
Judan

Posts: 6087
Liked others: 0
Was liked: 786
What was a Japanese 5d when Go made the comment?

Top
 Profile  
 
Offline
 Post subject: Re: Depth of reading correlates with rank - and other insigh
Post #20 Posted: Sun Jul 17, 2011 9:36 am 
Oza

Posts: 3647
Liked others: 20
Was liked: 4626
Before any high-dan amateurs become tempted to start bragging about how deep they can read, it occurs to me that it might be worth stressing that "depth of reading" here applies to amateurs. Amateurs in general have to think move by move because they haven't put the 10,000 hours in. In essence, they have to re-invent the wheel every time they play, which is hard, and it's no surprise that the process of "if he goes there, I go there" often ends up with square wheels.

As Yoda Norimoto points out in his book on how pros think, pros just don't think in that fashion. What they do is, to use his words, "pile up the images". In other words they have done the 10,000 hours of playing over games - in his case he claims to have countless images in his head from playing over the games of Shusaku and Go Seigen. He just superimposes these on the current position and, in that sense, he says he could claim to see 100,000 moves ahead - except the numbers are irrelevant. What is relevant is knowing what you want to achieve and finding images from your databank that help you focus on ways to achieve that.

Since 99% of amateurs haven't got much of an image databank, they can't use that method much, so have to revert to being Fred Flintstone.

Although Yoda doesn't expand on his use of the word "image", it does seem suggestive of his thought process when he was studying. It's as if he got to a position where he suddenly realised that there was a useful technique exemplified there, and a shutter in his brain went "click". I believe this is rather similar to what we all do when we see a new face. We don't consciously make a list of a person's features or count how many eyes/warts/freckles he has - our brains just go click and then other brain cells go to work in our subconscious, creating a databank.

Yoda gives another example which I like of just how far apart pro and amateur thinking are. It concerned a move 29 that he thought about for a long time. As soon as he played his choice - a big point on the side - he realised he had muffed it. The reason was (remember this was a big point) it was too focused on the endgame. We amateurs understand all the words he uses in describing this Zen-like moment of insight, but I venture to suggest we haven't really got a clue what he's talking about. I haven't either, but I'll hazard a guess that it meant he realised he'd been looking up too many images in the endgame section of his image databank.

Top
 Profile  
 
Display posts from previous:  Sort by  
Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 42 posts ]  Go to page 1, 2, 3  Next

All times are UTC - 8 hours [ DST ]


Who is online

Users browsing this forum: kvasir and 1 guest


You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot post attachments in this forum

Search for:
Jump to:  
Powered by phpBB © 2000, 2002, 2005, 2007 phpBB Group