Kaya.gs wrote:As a teacher and also as someone that devotes many hours weekly to training, i have to say that 99% of the ideas you can get by looking alternate training methods, are not going to be fruitful.
As a previous poster wrote, i am not clear at what the difference between reading and visualization is for you. What is to read 5 moves ahead without visualizing it?
The difference is that without visualizing, you might know the result, but you can't see it in your mind's eye. Imagine for example this:
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- Click Here To Show Diagram Code
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you
know what happens when white plays next, and it's also fairly easy to
see the resulting shape.
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$$. O . O .
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$$. . . . .
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When it gets just a bit more complicated though, you might still know what happens, but you might not be able to see it quite so clearly:
$$
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$$|a X O . .
$$|X X O . .
$$|X O . O .
$$|O O . . .
$$|. . . . .
- Click Here To Show Diagram Code
[go]$$
$$---------
$$|a X O . .
$$|X X O . .
$$|X O . O .
$$|O O . . .
$$|. . . . .[/go]
I know that that when white plays at a here, there will be a space left the size of four stones, but what does it look like?
While seeing is only one aspect of knowing what happens, I suspect it's an important one, and much of the rest of your post supports this opinion.
That said, solving problems without looking at them is a very standard training method in Asia. I found it difficult to do when i was 2-3d, but now when i solve problems i just glance at the position, and then close the book.
I have better performances looking at it, but id say that out of 100 problems i solve by looking at them, 90 i can solve in my head (although it always takes more time).
I had no idea that this is a standard method. (maybe my idea isn't so "alternate" after all). As I said a few times above, my idea is to visualize a problem accurately. That means to look at a position, and then with closed eyes be able to reconstruct the problem accurately in any orientation. Being able to do this is clearly a prerequisite to the training method you mention above.
Something very demistifying about reading, is that intuition is purely the result of previously solved problems. The same way you can play a hoshi joseki today without hesitation and 50 years ago pro players spent hours to play worse sequences.
So you must cram into your head as many patterns as possible: and as solid as possible too. You must solve all your problem books 10 times.
You will notice that by the 4th time, you see the answer before you even see the problem. "i know this one, its there". Then by the 10th time you cans solve the problems with 100% accuracy,and greatest long-term effects.
Basically, that's what I am doing. By spending such an inordinate amount of time with each problem I visualize, I am effectively cramming it into my head. Some people do a tsumego from a book and remember the solution a week later when they look at it again. I'm not one of those people. But the problems I've been visualizing stick with me quite a bit longer. Overlearning, as Bill Spight might say.
Thats my 2cents.
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