I was scanning back over a column I did on memory and noticed something I missed before.
The strategy section producer slotted
in a number of photos, picking ones that he thought would be amusing
and relevant to the topic. He's got a real eye for this, and must have
one hell of a database to work with marked cards.
Anyway, while scanning over the piece, I noticed that all the photos were of middle-aged and elderly men! There was Doyle, T.J. and, for a bit of balance, the merely middle-aged Andy Black.
I
have no idea if he did this on purpose, but it got me thinking and led
me to the topic for this week: psychological functions that change as we
age.
Memory Accuracy - Memory Capacity: You may
not like to hear this, or you may not care. If you're young, you almost
certainly don't care, 'cause when you're young you're invulnerable -
can dodge bullets and leap tall buildings in a single bound - and hence
find it virtually impossible to grasp what will happen to you down the
long, dusty road.
But if you're in your 40s and up you probably are already sensing that things just "ain't what they usta was."
Your
ability to recall events is degraded. Words, names and events sit
squirming, unuttered, on the tip of your tongue. And when you try to
reconstruct what happened two hands back when you got felted, well ...
it's all a blur.
In that earlier piece we found that memory, no
matter what we might like to believe, is actually rather poor, filled
with errors, misrememberings, misinterpretations and outright
falsehoods. We are all guilty of these sins of recollection, but the
ante gets upped several-fold for each decade of our lives.
The poker moral here?
For
the young and the restless, don't sweat it. The future will show up
whether you want it to or not, but there's nothing to worry about now.
For the geriatric set? There are some things we can do. First, play shorter sessions.
As
more and more hands are played our memory gets "clogged" (yeah, I know,
that's not a technical term but it's not far off from what actually
happens) and it gets harder and harder to remember what's actually
happening.
And this can prove expensive, like when you can't
remember whether it's the cowboy hat or the smarmy guy with the bad rug
sitting next to him who's been making all those loose calls cheat poker.
Or
when you did manage to note that Seat 2 was a raising maniac but forgot
that he moved to Seat 7 and you can't recall what he looked like.
Second,
be honest with yourself. Be aware that as you get older your memory
will degrade. Take your time to make sure you've properly understood a
hand, take more breaks and know that each little memory cache you've
given up has been replaced by the wisdom garnered from life's
experiences.
Time to React - Time to Decide: A
reaction time is exactly what it sounds like, the time it takes you to
react to something. Ditto for decision time. We psychologists know a lot
about them - more than you want to know, trust me, because the topic
would test the patience of a monk.
Among the straightforward things we know are:
a. Reaction times slow down as the decisions get more complex.
b. Reaction times and decision times slow down with age.
The
first is pretty obvious. If I ask you to press a button as soon as you
see a light, you're fast. If I ask you to press one button if the light
is red and another if it's blue, you're a lot slower.
The second is also obvious. Do the same experiment with people of varying ages and the older they are, the slower they will be.
But
the obvious gets less so when we look at live games and online play.
For live play neither of these issues looms particularly large. If the
decisions are tough, just take your time.
Yeah, every now and
again some dude will call time on you, but for the most part, players
will give you the time you need to make tough calls.
And age
doesn't matter. Geezers will take longer to make decisions but, for the
most part, players will accommodate and there won't be problems.
But
online it all changes, and if you're multi-tabling the problems grow
exponentially. Online play is fast and there are strict time limits on
your action. You can hit the "time" button but you're not going to get
as long as you might like.
And, unlike the live games where the
dealer will ask you to please make a decision, online the freakin'
computer just assumes you've passed out on the floor (or whatever),
folds your hand and, if you don't do something about it, skips you on
the next deal.
It's pretty clear why Internet poker has become a young person's
game. The time pressures are increased and for every additional table
you play they go up.
If you're flashing around between two or
more screens with 6, 10, 15 and even more tables going simultaneously,
your reaction and decision times better be really, really fast or you're
going to be in trouble.
There is a lot of discussion about the
optimal number of tables to play. Without going into gory detail, it's a
complex function of your normative reaction and decision times and the
average edge you have in the level of game you're playing.
But
what many haven't recognized is that as the number of decisions per unit
time goes up, so does error rate; as the memory load increases, error
rates will accompany it.
As error rates go up, win rates go down.
For each individual, where their error-rate and win-rate curves cross
will dictate the optimal number of tables to play.
And this
cross-point will change depending on how much experience you have had,
how tough the games are, how tired you are and how many miles are on your tires.
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