jimrandomh comments on Alternate Sleep Schedules - Less Wrong

8 [deleted] 11 January 2011 11:47AM

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Comment author: [deleted] 11 January 2011 03:16:36PM *  2 points [-]

Good call; we'd figured that we would just notice if our cognitive performance declined, since we perform lots of cognitive tasks daily, but maybe we should be suspect of our ability to judge our performance.

Does anyone have any suggestions for test we could use? Would, for example, my mean Tetris score (or distribution of Tetris scores, since I could get better or worse with each passing game as my brain got more used to Tetris or as it got more tired) per waking period (not that I plan to play Tetris every waking period), be a good reference?

EDIT: Tetris sounds like a really stupid way to measure cognitive skills, now that I re-read this. I guess it was just the first thing I thought of that I could easily keep quantitative track of.

EDIT 2: I play a lot of Tetris (~1 hour a day, but not usually for more than ~20 minutes at a time), and it is the only video game I play.

Comment author: jimrandomh 11 January 2011 03:45:32PM 4 points [-]

You probably want a bunch of quick, dissimilar tests. One interesting one which hasn't received much attention is the Embedded Figures Test.

Comment author: gwern 11 January 2011 06:44:43PM 1 point [-]

If he's on Linux, he could try a suite of puzzlegames like gbrainy.

Comment author: [deleted] 12 January 2011 12:49:30AM 0 points [-]

I can't believe I didn't think of that! I'm on Ubuntu, so that's perfect!

Comment author: malcolmocean 02 April 2013 02:01:57AM 3 points [-]

I'm going to point out that since the writing of this post, a tool has been created for exactly this purpose: Quantified Mind