What makes Magnus Carlsen so good? The psychology behind chess – with Fernand Gobet | Part 2

Can a computer have intuition? Is chess genius linked to madness? And what would it actually take to become Magnus Carlsen?
In this second part of his Royal Institution lecture, Professor Fernand Gobet delivers the answers — and several of them will surprise you.
Picking up from Part 1, Gobet reveals what AI systems like AlphaZero have taught us about human intuition, why pattern recognition alone can achieve an ELO of 2,800 without any search at all, and why the romantic idea of the "mad chess genius" is almost entirely a myth. If you haven't watched Part 1, we recommend you start there: https://youtu.be/2pd6xtEAaJE

This talk was filmed at the Ri on the 13th April 2026.

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Chapters:
0:00 The skill effect in random positions — meta-analysis results
1:19 How chunks translate into finding good moves
2:08 Evidence for intuition: simultaneous chess, blitz, and bullet
3:48 10-second problem solving experiments
4:48 EEG brain scans: expert intuition in 250 milliseconds
8:10 The SEARCH model — combining intuition and calculation
10:53 AlphaZero: pattern recognition vs. guided search
12:12 LazyBot: playing at ELO 2,800 with zero calculation
13:48 Results: how AI pure intuition compares to human players
15:50 Explanation 3: Deliberate practice — does the 10,000-hour rule hold?
17:26 The huge variability in hours needed to become a master
18:01 Carlsen became a grandmaster in 5 years — not 10
18:54 Explanation 4: Starting age and the critical period hypothesis
20:42 Explanation 5: Talent — intelligence and personality
21:02 Meta-analysis: does IQ predict chess skill?
22:09 Personality traits in chess players
24:05 The mad genius myth — and why Bobby Fischer disproves it
26:07 Debunking the myths: a summary
27:16 What makes Carlsen exceptional — the full picture
29:00 Thank you
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Fernand Gobet is Professorial Research Fellow at the London School of Economics and Political Science, and one of the world's leading authorities on expertise and talent. An International Chess Master since 1985 and former member of the Swiss national team, he has authored over 400 scientific publications and eleven books — including The Psychology of Chess (2018) and Understanding Expertise (2016).
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#Chess #MagnusCarlsen #CognitiveScience #Psychology #ChessStrategy #Expertise #HowToLearnFaster #RoyalInstitution #ArtificialIntelligence #AlphaZero #ChessGrandmaster #10000HourRule #PatternRecognition #ChessPsychology #MindAndBrain Receive SMS online on sms24.me

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