(Cognitive science) In coaching, rewriting the unconscious is a powerful means of achieving the goal.
By studying "Study of Consciousness", I would like to think about my method and the coaching theory, such as unconscious rewriting.
This series of blog posts is my study note.
Research has shown that the Grand Master of Chess can evaluate the placement of pieces and memorize the details by automatically dividing the board into meaningful components and analyzing them at a glance. It has been proven.
Recent studies have also shown that the analysis is processed unknowingly.
You can flash the simplified board for 20 milliseconds and mask it just before and after, but it still affects the Grand Master's judgment.
However, this is only true when solving significant problems, such as determining if a check is in place only for a seasoned chess player.
The visual system considers the type and position of the pieces and quickly integrates that information into a comprehensive meaning, such as "the black king is a check."
And such processing is processed unknowingly.
We have several sensory input modes called modal channels, which have different language types for sight, hearing, touch, taste, and smell.
When watching a movie, you don't need to combine visual and auditory input information.
As a result, several different sensory inputs are unknowingly combined, and we only notice the result.
Please see this video.
It combines the speaker's "pa" voice and the "ka" mouth movement.
As a result, it sounds different when you look at your mouth and when you hide your mouth.
The viewer's brain faces contradictions.
And the brain unknowingly resolves this contradiction by fusing the two pieces of information.
Research has shown that the Grand Master of Chess can evaluate the placement of pieces and memorize the details by automatically dividing the board into meaningful components and analyzing them at a glance. It has been proven.
Recent studies have also shown that the Grandmaster unknowingly handles it.
You can flash the simplified board for 20 milliseconds and put a mask between before and after to make it invisible.
Still, it affects the judgment of the Grand Master.
This judgement is called the "McGurk effect" reported in 1976 by Harry McGurk and John McDonald.
This auditory illusion shows that our conscious experience is reconstructed later.
We are not listening to the sound waves that reach our ears, nor are we seeing the light that comes into our eyes.
We can access the raw sensory data, and the outside world's image is reconstructed in the brain.
Behind the scenes, every piece of sensory information received is examined, weighted based on confidence, and
The brain plays a role in connecting to a consistent whole.
This auditory illusion is due to our conscious experience.
This fact indicates that it rebuild at a later stage.
If we are not listening to the sound waves that reach our ears,
I'm not looking at the light coming into my eyes.
The brain examines the sensory information received through modal channels and
Weighted based on reliability and tied to a consistent overall
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