Scott Alexander examines why skills plateau, proposing decay and interference hypotheses to explain the phenomenon across various fields.
Longer summary
Scott Alexander explores why skills plateau despite continued practice, focusing on creative artists, doctors, and formal education. He presents two main hypotheses: the decay hypothesis, where knowledge is forgotten if not regularly reviewed, and the interference hypothesis, where similar information blends together, making it difficult to learn new things in the same domain. The post discusses how these hypotheses explain various learning phenomena, including the ability to learn multiple unrelated skills simultaneously. Scott also considers edge cases and potential applications of these theories, such as mnemonic devices and language learning strategies.
Shorter summary