It's true.   In fact it's well known in chess that if you are losing and
the game is virtually a good last ditch effort is to start playing quickly.
  It can often evoke fast play from the opponent and possibly a resulting
blunder.   I salvage a couple of tournament games that way myself.

Don



On Tue, Jun 4, 2013 at 3:37 AM, Petri Pitkanen
<[email protected]>wrote:

> I have only anecdotal evidence but still I am pretty sure of my
> observation: Faster I play faster my opponents respond - usually -
> regardless of time limits. So playing fast may well trigger bad moves by
> opponent.
>
> Petri
>
>
> 2013/6/4 Detlef Schmicker <[email protected]>
>
>> I wonder if somebody tested the "human" playing strength versus bot
>> respond time on kgs (with the same bot parameters otherwize).
>>
>> The reason I ask is: I want to test the scaling with playouts_per_move.
>> Aya is so kind to offer its playouts per move and I wondered if the
>> "relatively" bad scaling has to do with humans playing more serious if
>> the bot takes more time?
>>
>> Detlef
>>
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