Inside the Grandmasters' Brains
dunkerz writes: "The BBC News site has an article on how the great chess players play so well: they use a different part of their brain (or so German scientists say)."
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I got to play Kasparov about 10 years ago, during a visit he made to the states. It's amazing to watch these top players run around to 50 different opponents at a time, immediately move, and win every match. If it wasn't clear from his speed, it was clear from talking to him that he did almost no analysis at each board; rather he "recognized" the position, or recognize how similar it was to positions he'd been in many times before, and remembered his strategy for that position.
At the same time, tho, one of the other things I remember from hearing him talk was that he routinely looks 8 or 9 moves ahead in a game if it does require analysis. I'm sure it's a combination of both skills (pattern matching and analysis) that makes the best the best.