The stereotype of the chess player is someone who is smart, logical and good at maths. This is why so many parents around the world are keen to get their children playing chess – in the hope the game might help to boost their children’s intelligence levels and help them succeed in a wide variety of subjects.
But apart from chess being a great game – its history rooted in eastern India military – is there actually any evidence to show playing chess can make you smarter?
In a previous article, we showed chess players exhibit, on average, superior cognitive ability compared to non-chess players.
And the skills needed to play chess have also been shown to correlate with several measures of intelligence – such as fluid reasoning, memory, and processing speed.
But while the existence of a relationship between general cognitive ability and chess-skill is clear, is this simply because intelligent people are more likely to engage in the game of chess, or does engaging in chess make people smarter?
Brain game
The notion playing chess makes you smarter goes something like this – cess requires concentration and intelligence, and as mathematics and literacy require the same general skills, then practising chess must also improve one’s academic achievement.
With this idea in mind, the Institute of Education conducted a large investigation to test the effects of chess instruction on the academic skills of nearly 4,000 British children.
Promptly, the chess community questioned the reliability of the results, particularly given other studies offer a more optimistic picture about the academic benefits of chess instruction.
Assessing the evidence
The chess community is probably right in criticising the recent study, as it suffers from several methodological shortcomings that probably invalidate the results.
Before the results were published, we carried out a review of all the studies in the field. Our results showed some moderate effects of chess instruction on cognitive ability and academic achievement, especially mathematics.
And yet, we still need to be cautious in interpreting these results as a positive indication of the power of chess on cognitive or academic skills. This is because most of the reviewed studies compared the effect of chess with groups doing no alternative activities.
This is a problem because research has shown the excitement and fun induced by novel activities can cause a positive temporal effect on test scores – a placebo effect.
Crucially, when compared to an alternative activity – such as checkers or sports – chess did not show any significant effect on children’s skills. So, it could well just be the observed positive effects of chess instruction are merely due to placebo effects.
Chess notes
What all this shows is it is unlikely chess has a significant impact on overall cognitive ability. So, while it might sound like a quick win – that a game of chess can improve a broad range of skills – unfortunately this is not the case.
The failure of generalisation of a particular skill, in fact, happens to occur in many other areas beyond chess – such as music training, which has been shown to have no effect on non-music cognitive or academic abilities. The same applies to video game training, brain training, and working memory training, among others.
The fact that skills learned by training do not transfer across different domains seems to be a universal in human cognition. In other words, you get better, at best, at what you train in, which may just sound just like good old-fashioned common sense.
But although expecting chess to enhance children’s cognitive ability and overall academic achievement is just wishful thinking, this doesn’t mean it can’t still add value to a child’s education.
Clearly, playing chess involves some level of arithmetical and geometrical skill, and designing mathematical games or exercises with chess material can still be a simple and fun way to help children to learn.
By Giovanni Sala, PhD Candidate – Cognitive Psychology, University of Liverpool and Fernand Gobet, Professor of Decision Making and Expertise, University of Liverpool.
This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.
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