How to REMEMBER what you read 🧠
Вставка
- Опубліковано 5 чер 2024
- Shortform link:
shortform.com/artem
How do you remember everything you read?
In this video I talk about how you can use a spaced repetition platform Anki (apps.ankiweb.net/) to remember what you read, by turning books and papers into flashcards
My name is Artem, I'm a computational neuroscience student and researcher at Moscow State University.
Socials:
Twitter: / artemkrsv
Augmenting long-term memory article:
augmentingcognition.com/ltm.html
OUTLINE
00:00 - Introduction
01:21 - Memory decay & how to fight it
03:23 - Why memorise at all? - Bloom's taxonomy
04:42 - Shortform message
05:51 - Creating effective flashcards
09:01 - Conclusion & outro
B-roll footage by pexels.com
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shortform.com/artem
When I started to feel like I was forgetting what I was reading, I decided to add one special exercise to my daily routine: I would read one page carefully and then, turning it over, immediately try to reproduce what I had learned on the previous page. This made my reading very slow, but after a few weeks I noticed that my working memory improved significantly and I was back to normal reading.
I don’t know why i stopped making flash cards… thanks so much for reminding that spaced repetition works! Awesome video 🎉
I really value your videos - thank you Artem. I'm a first year PhD student in archaeology and use Obsidian but have been considering incorporating Anki into my workflow for some time. This video may have tipped the balance for me!
Yet another great video on this channel. well done Artem👏
A brain studying brains to be better at processing information about brains
Thank you so much for your video(s). You are probably my nr1 recouse for workflow and learning techniques on UA-cam
Super cool! We need more evidence-based advice on productivity from researchers like you ❤
Another practical and entertaining video. Thanks Artem! 👍
This went a very different direction from where I expected it. You've repeatedly shown that much of the memory handling functions of the brain involve creating spatial maps. The ancients seemed to have an instinctive understanding of this, thus the use of "memory palace" techniques. It's because of this spatial association technique being widely used to memorize speeches that we rhetorically tend to argue, "In the first place ..." It's also why people remember more of what they read if they read physical books instead of e-books, the book has a spatial dimension.
Very good video! I am very happy that I discovered your channel!
Another great tool to try, thank you son much. Will really help my learning!
Hey man thanks for the video it was really great!
Great video, thanks!
Its actually trauma, and continually traumatic events that create "blocks"
Nothing degrades over time, every memory is crisp, and clear...as you KNOW it should be.
Your getting there...keep going.
A guide to your Anki setup ( similar to one that you did for Obs + Zettel) would be cool.
Just found out about your channel (great content!), I am a neuroscience student as well (started masters this year). At the end of the video you said that this method works best if one's passionate about what they are studying. What if I came across some topics that I am not really interested in? How do I make them appealing to me?
Estuvo bien. Gracias.
Thanks
I hope the way you are on camera is the same way you are on real life. Something about you is just pleasant.
Thank you!
I don't know, I hope so >
I can’t get enough of your content. Pleeeease provide us more *insert Kyle wren meme*
❤❤
Would like to know where I can find the background you're using for you anki setup. Thanks for the insights!
That's a Nikon Small World winning image of hippocampal neurons - www.nikonsmallworld.com/galleries/2020-photomicrography-competition/connections-between-hippocampal-neurons-brain-cells
I've slightly modified the color balance to make it look better as a background though
do you use this method alongside your notes in obsidian?
👌
Justin Sung covered this well.
Can we combine this with Zettelkasten?
Your voice is hard to understand, because of the reflection of your table into the mic. Get it closer to you or use a Lavalier microphone. Love your vids. Keep it coming :) ♥
👀
whats the limit to how many curves of info the brain can remember tho.
speaking of remembering, I was thinking the guy's funny, lemme like the video. (it was liked) OK, he has this manifold nice video too, let's subscribe to its channel (already subscribed...) sh*t man!
Anki for medical students type of videos😂
Артем, а можно попросить тебе сделать видео на ту же тему, но уже с нормальной проработкой? А то таксономия Блума, карточки...это вообще позор для ученого из нейронаук из МГУ - никакого системного виденья.
Have you been using RemNote?
Hi! Yes, I have been using RemNote for creating flashcards from the outline, when I was preparing for the exams last semester.
However, at this moment I'm using Anki much more than RemNote, mostly because the collaboration features of RemNote are still buggy - I can't conveniently share the flashcards with my friends. Whereas import / export functionality of Anki is more convenient to my taste
Poke the article from different points
Calcium deficiency?
I'm known to have a very good memory. I almost never take notes during a meeting, because it actually makes me forget things. I do jot down superficial vocabulary - because the vocabulary has little to do with the knowledge but a lot to do with the embodiment of the knowledge into natural and factual language. The key to deep and long lasting memory is to UNDERSTAND the dynamics of he topic ; the ones that surface in words and concepts. If you do not understand the "gist" of a piece of knowledge and merely approach it from a taxonomic point of view, your memory of it, and your ability to extend, debate or transcend the knowledge, will be very poor. The question then becomes : What is 'understanding' ? It is that part of intelligence that still eludes research in artificial intelligence : The ability to feel the dynamics of a phenomenon ; its reason as an effect, and its medium as a cause. Some phenomena are merely accidental nodes in a causal graph ; others are imparted with teleological intent (Aristotle's Four Causes may good to revisit).
Мужик, твои видео будут полезны не только для англоязычных зрителей, поэтому спрошу: будут переводы твоих видео на русский? Желаю тебе удачи.
𝓹𝓻𝓸𝓶𝓸𝓼𝓶
nice videos artem
However rip to your countries research and economy