Just giving a short table-summary of an article by James Shanteau on which areas and tasks experts developed a good intuition - and which ones they didn't. Though the article is old, the results seem to be in agreement with more recent summaries, such as Kahneman and Klein's. The heart of the article was a decomposition of characteristics (for professions and for tasks within those professions) where we would expert experts to develop good performance:
Good performance | Poor performance |
---|---|
Static stimuli Decisions about things Experts agree on stimuli More predictable problems Some errors expected Repetitive tasks Feedback available Objective analysis available Problem decomposable Decision aids common |
Dynamic (changeable) stimuli Decisions about behavior Experts disagree on stimuli Less predictable problems Few errors expected Unique tasks Feedback unavailable Subjective analysis only Problem not decomposable Decision aids rare |
I do feel that this may go some way to explaining the expert's performance here.
Why not make a top-level post or two that you can just link back to occasionally? This would also help to avoid derailing new comment threads, as discussion could take place at said posts.
I tried that a while ago, but the results were disappointing enough that in the meantime I've grown somewhat embarrassed by that post. (Disappointing both in terms of the lack of interesting feedback and the ruckus occasioned by some concrete examples that touched on controversial topics, which I avoided with less scrupulousness back then.) For whatever reason, insofar as I get interesting feedback here, it looks like I get more of it per unit of effort when I stick to run-of-the-mill commenting than if I were to invest effort in quality top-level posts. (I don't think this is a general rule for all posters here, though.)