Robert I. Reynolds
Home * People * Robert I. Reynolds
Robert I. Reynolds, (July 20, 1950 – March 10, 2013 [2])
was an American psychologist and professor at Fordham University, FIDE Master in chess [3],
International Master in Correspondence Chess
and sixth US Correspondence Chess Champion [4]. He researched and published on perception and cognition in chess, and human search heuristics.
Selected Publications
- Robert I. Reynolds (1981). Perception of an Illusory Contour as a Function of Processing Time. Perception, Vol. 10, No. 1
- Robert I. Reynolds (1982). Search Heuristics of Chess Players of Different Calibers. American Journal of Psychology, Vol. 95, No. 3
- Dennis H. Holding, Robert I. Reynolds (1982). Recall or Evaluation of Chess Positions as Determinants of Chess Skill. Memory & Cognition, Vol. 10, No. 3
- Robert I. Reynolds (1992). Recognition of Expertise in Chess Players. American Journal of Psychology, Vol. 105, No. 3
External Links
- The chess games of Prof. Robert I Reynolds from chessgames.com
- Reynolds, Robert FIDE Chess Profile
- The Robert I. Reynolds Challenge (1986) by John L. Jerz