Top Banner
Expertise
27

Expertise

Jan 01, 2016

Download

Documents

gay-holt

Expertise. Questions. What are differences between novices and experts? How to become an expert? Speed of learning. Characterization of Experts. Experts excel mainly in their own domains Experts perceive large meaningful patterns in their domain Experts are fast - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Expertise

Expertise

Page 2: Expertise

Questions

• What are differences between novices and experts?

• How to become an expert?

• Speed of learning

Page 3: Expertise

Characterization of Experts

• Experts excel mainly in their own domains

• Experts perceive large meaningful patterns in their domain

• Experts are fast

• Experts see and represent a problem in their own domain at a deeper level than novices – they see structural similarities between problems

• Experts work forwards from givens to unknowns

• Experts have strong self-monitoring skills

Page 4: Expertise

Experts excel mainly in their own domains

• experts are masters in their own domain

• the skill does not cross into different domains

Page 5: Expertise

Experts perceive large meaningful patterns in their domain

• Experts have extensive knowledge

• Allows them to notice meaningful patterns

• top-down processes -- giving meaning to what it is we see

Page 6: Expertise

See anything unusual?

• Experts need only a few seconds to see what is wrong (or what isn’t)

• Experts augment these incomplete images with extensive background information

(collapse of the upper right lobe, upper left in picture) (normal)

Page 7: Expertise

Chess Studies

• (DeGroot, 1965; Simon & Chase, 1973)

• For master chess players, depth of search is same as novices. Also, about the same number of moves are considerd.

• However, masters spend more time on good moves.

• Masters rely on extensive experience: 50,000 patterns

Page 8: Expertise

Chase & Simon (1973)

Page 9: Expertise

Actual Board Position

Page 10: Expertise

Random Board Position

Page 11: Expertise

Conclusion from Chase & Simon (1973)

• Experts do not have better memory in general

• Experts encode with large meaningful perceptual units Chunks

• Experts organize knowledge differently – reflects a deep understanding.

Page 12: Expertise

Experts see and represent a problem in their own domain at a deeper level than novices…

• Experts see structural similarities • Novices see surface similarity

Page 13: Expertise

Novices group these

Experts group these

Page 14: Expertise

What makes an expert an expert?

• Talent? IQ? Practice? Genetic factors?

• Study exceptional feats: – Memory experts– Chess experts– Musicians– Athletes

Page 15: Expertise

General & Inherited Factors

IQ tests

Short-term memory

Speed of reading

Reasoning ability

Attention

Do not predict superior performance

Experts are not better problem solvers in general. Expertise is domain specific

Page 16: Expertise

Practice

• 10 year rule– 10 years of deliberate practice needed to

attain an international level. Arts, Sciences, sports

– Master chess players spend 10,000 – 20,000 hours playing

• True for idiot savants & prodigies?

Page 17: Expertise

What about talent?

• Maybe exceptional performance in some area can be explained by talent – an innate predisposition that predetermines performance in a domain.

• Anders Ericsson et al.

disagree that concept of talent is useful or explains anything.

claim that expertise is mostly a matter of deliberate practice, not simply engaging in activity, but practicing in an effortful, intensive, self-monitored mode

this is controversial!

Page 18: Expertise

What about talent in athletic performance?

• Athletic performance:– Height– physique

– Size of heart– Number of capillaries for muscles– Proportion of types of mucle fibers

genetic

Practicehas substantial impact

Page 19: Expertise

What about musical talent?

• Absolute pitch:

– Most musicians acquired it for their own instruments

– Can be improved by training

• Ericsson shows that difference between good and exceptional musicians is related to the amount of practice (next slide)

Page 20: Expertise
Page 21: Expertise

Learning mechanisms

• How does a skill improve over time?

• Learning curves – fine-tuning a skill

Page 22: Expertise

Practice with Cigar Rolling

Page 23: Expertise
Page 24: Expertise
Page 25: Expertise

• Deliberate practice improves performance

• Might take a long time to improve

• Skills show high level of retention (e.g., skiiing)

Page 26: Expertise

Digit Span

• Number of digits that can be repeated after one presentation

1 4 3 1 9 2 1 2 0 …..

• Normal digit span = 7 or 8 digits (phone number). Encoding strategies help

1 4 3 1 9 2 1 2 0 …..

P143 number of this class

P192 another number of this class

Room number for class

Page 27: Expertise

Growth in memory span for one subject (S.F.) with practice

Memory span for digits can be trainedyou too can have a 80 digit memory span