Veritasium on becoming an expert

I agree, and he has excellent material. His goal for the past decade or so is to become a leader in science education and communication content, which I think he is achieving.

One of my favorite videos he made was about the discovery of the blue LED.
 
I think his four points also apply to becoming better at pool.


I agree it applies to pool.

I have seen this and had several medical students watch it.

I use and teach Socratic questioning, Aristotle's methods, Bayesian methods, and more.

An interesting outcome of memorization is false memories. More memorization equals more false memories. I've been working on methods to reduce that.

In my field we work a lot on recognizing, refining, and cultivating predictors of success. As was said in the video the "gatekeepers" don't typically do so well.
 
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Serious solitary study
Deliberate practice
Build in the habit

Well there's my Cliff Notes version of my take away from the video. Ooops wait a minute, that's been my method for a long time. 🤷‍♂️ So no surprise that those are the 3 keys that strike a chord with me.
 
The important point is that repeated experiences and timely feed back are critical to making forward progress.

This is why (unlike others here) I focus on the line I want the CB to roll down instead of CB or contact point on OB.
a) if CB does not roll down the chosen line, this denotes a stroke error.
b) if CB rolls down the chosen line and OB does not pot, this denotes an aiming error.
And we are talking about fractions of a millimeter when watching CB roll down that line.
1) any movement in the upper body or head destroys your ability to see the rolling error
2) which destroys your feedback on whether any error was stroke related or aim related.
 
Oh, so now after 9,000 hours of practice, I find out that just 10,000 is not going to do it.
I guess I should have figured that out.
 
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The 4 points.
 
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