What is your goal? Speed? Readability? Code terseness?
If you're seeking speed, think about minimizing the number of memory accesses. If you can force your booleans to be stored as bits, you could use >> and & to compare only the bits you care about in each row. Maybe something like this:
byte grid[m][n / 8];
int neighbor_count = 0;
for (int row = yPos - 1; row < yPos + 1; row++) {
// calculate how much to shift the bits over.
int shift = 5 - (xPos - 1 % 8);
if (shift > 0) {
// exercise for the reader - span bytes.
} else {
// map value of on-bits to count of on bits
static byte count[8] = [0, 1, 1, 2, 1, 2, 2, 3];
// ensure that only the lowest 3 bits are on.
low3 = (grid[row][xPos / 8] >> shift) & 7;
// look up value in map
neighbor_count += count[low3];
}
caveat coder: this is untested and meant for illustration only. It also contains no bounds-checking: a way around that is to iterate from 1 to max - 2 and have a border of unset cells. Also you should subtract 1 if the cell being evaluated is on.
This might end up being slower than what you have. You can further optimize it by storing the bitmap in int32s (or whatever's native). You could also use multithreading, or just implement Hashlife :)
Obviously this optimizes away from terseness and readability. I think you've got maximum readability in your code.
As Jeffrey alludes to, storing a sparse array of 'on' booleans might be preferable to an array of values, depending on what you're doing.