Interesting. Is this typically the case with chess? Humans tend to do better with tasks when they are repeated more frequently, albeit with strongly diminishing returns.
I see what you mean, and yes, that is a plausible hypothesis. It’s hard to get a solid number, but glancing over the individual records of my games, it looks like I was playing about as much as usual. Subjectively, it doesn’t feel like lack of practice was responsible.
I think the right way to interpret my use of “stress” in this context is “the bundle of psychological pressures associated with exam season,” rather than a psychological construct that we can neatly distinguish from, say, distractability or sleep loss. It’s kind of like saying “being on an ocean voyage with no access to fresh fruits and vegetables caused me to get scurvy.”
I see what you mean, and yes, that is a plausible hypothesis. It’s hard to get a solid number, but glancing over the individual records of my games, it looks like I was playing about as much as usual. Subjectively, it doesn’t feel like lack of practice was responsible.
I think the right way to interpret my use of “stress” in this context is “the bundle of psychological pressures associated with exam season,” rather than a psychological construct that we can neatly distinguish from, say, distractability or sleep loss. It’s kind of like saying “being on an ocean voyage with no access to fresh fruits and vegetables caused me to get scurvy.”