Short summary: - When you imagine bizarre stories it becomes a lot easier to remember. - If you tie this stories with place where you know very well (like your body or room) memorizing things on order become a lot easier. - Everyone can improve yourself by experimenting (your age is doesn't matter) - Find a new different methods to improve yourself and applying it in your life to see how it work for you. - With experiments in your life you will be better not only in particular skill, but also it skill to learn new thing. It will impact to your hobbies, work, relationships - to all you life.
Dude we have the same profile picture! What are the odds! I mean they're above zero but still, it's not a picture people commonly use a profile pic. In fact, you're the first one I've seen use it. And I've been using it for years.
There's a book called Hidden Time Wealth, and it talks about how using some secret techniques, you can overcome procrastination and accomplish anything in life. It's not just a bunch of empty promises; it's the real deal.
@ItsMeAgain TV Damn I hope you got your permit but I would have told you had I seen this last week the best way to study for the CDL permit test is to take online practice test over and over and over until you get to 100% correct answer and it will all make sense to you then. I had the same problem, i'm a visual person too. I really don't like reading unless it's something i'm very interested in. Got my CDL's last year using that method because the first time I took "General knowledge" I failed.
I’m 75 and I love to keep learning and growing. One word of caution though: there is not one single method, including yours, that works for everyone. There is no single best way. A lot depends on being able to imagine and then finding your own way, as you found yours. These may be tools we can all use, but they are not the only way it happens, and for some people, maybe not the best.
I have zero visual memory, I can't even imagine in my mind nor draw people close to me, except that I know they have a head, eyes, nose and mouth lol. However my audio memory is much much better.
You know as well as I do that when we were in school in the 50s/60s no one had any concern if we learned memory techniques or not. If a student didn't do well it was "well boys aren't any good at reading/English, and girls can't do math, so they need to be in the secretary-Home Ec track". What memory techniques do IMO are help relieve anxiety.
How to memorize stuff easier for real: Long passages or phrases: type it out and read through it, then change the font and read through it again, then go through and change the font color of the end of some words to white. ex: the word "memorize" would look like "m " then try reading through it again, maybe change the font again or font size, keep getting rid of the end of words until you have almost the entire passage changed to blank space and word beginnings. This helps you memorize the words and phrases themselves and changing fonts helps you to remember words in relation to the sentence and not the location on the page, our brains like to take shortcuts wherever possible. Object pairings (ex how to know which name matches up to different groupings): for this you will need to memorize truly at least one or two things. When trying to remember object pairings, try to remember relationships of one thing to another. Think about the words themselves if all else fails. Are the words in alphabetical order when they appear in the right order? Reverse alphabetical order? Do the word sizes go from big to small, or vise versa? Does the series of things follow a pattern? Maybe the mneumonic just happens to follow the same first letters as your friend-group, the relationship doesn't have to be a typical one. Take the word "parallel", for example, the two L's make parallel lines. Your mind is always looking for the relationships between things, if you provide it even subtle ones, it is more likely to remember them. Random other things: Making stories does help occasionally, but so does songs, visualizing things, drawing things out (maybe you're learning about Einstein's theory of relativity and you draw a cone that goes over a dog's head to help you remember the shape of mass in the space-time continuum, it doesn't always have to directly relate), picturing things on different parts of your body so you remember it when you look at that part of yourself, prolonged occasional exposure, linking memories or locations with what you wish to remember, thinking of it abstractly and relating it to real life (maybe you just measured something at 6 3/4 inches and you need to remember that for your project you're working on, imagine what you'll be doing in 6 3/4 hours or what you'd buy with $6 3/4 and you'll remember the object or thing you'd be doing far better than the numbers). There are lots of small things that your brain can cling to and make up far easier than a complicated story, and your needs vary per occasion so your memorizing tactics probably will too. I hope this helps! I've personally found it easier than the one-size-fits-all storytelling tactic that we're often taught.
I could only memorise 4 of 10 items on my first attempt. Then i watched the rest of the video, and learned how to triple my memory. Now i can remember twelve out of ten.
I saw this man perform his spontaneous poetry in a very lovely resort on Langkawi some years ago. He was a brilliant wordsmith with his quick wit - a charming most unusual entertainer and Ive never forgotten him as one of the most talented and unusual performers Ive ever seen Now he is challenging my mind as well as entertaining me - what growth of a very unique skill
It helps to memorize things as we are short on time. Imagine if you can memorize your patients names, wouldn’t that make your life easier? What if you have a treatment or drug name intuitively memorized... you save yourselves time by looking it up. Tech is for reminding you, clarifying details, and quick and safe transmission of new research. (Think Google). However I would absolutely love to increase my memory power and it’s best others do as well. Lol even forgetting has its own benefits... but let’s not get me started
Dear Mr. Ricardo Lieuw On, I am now a retired spine surgeon. I took my first course in mnemonics after I finished my internship. I was very angry that this is not a federal requirement to be taught in all schools. The time, energy and resources that would be improved boggles my imagination. The ripple effect on ideas, inventions and books goes through the roof. Please do everything you can to make a federal law that these techniques be taught in all schools. Thank you.🙂
Hi. retired medic here. Agreed. I've been saying similar for 40 years. IT gives some muscle, but not fleetfooted enough. They should do a pilot, maybe one med school. Regards from UK.
"The art of learning" Thank you, Ricardo, for this amazing presentation. You're a great teacher! (which IMO is an art form as well; The art of teaching) + ReMind sounds like an incredible initiative. Bravo! 🙏🏽😃❤
No one, I repeat no one on this face of earth has explained to me the concept of memory palace better than this gentleman here. Thank you, sir! You have done a fantastic job!
thanks. I was trying to remember the term. I studied "Memory Master" tapes back in the 90's. Had forgotten...ha hah ha...as I tend to use humorous visualizations instead, and word play to cement things into memory.
This is a good method for memorising lists of unrelated items, but it doesn’t account for the fact that most things that we learn are also first UNDERSTOOD, not just memorised. In fact, understanding what you want to remember is the first step that you should do.
You havent got the point of the video. By doing that he tried to explain that there's not only one way to learn, but there's many ways an the only way to find those out is to experiment and find the methods that best suit you.
@@f52_yeevy here's the thing, after learning something new. Just memorize that information through imagination so you'll always remember it. And then the more you process it the more it becomes part of the subconscious mind. Hence, part of the long term memory.
Let me appeal to deep thinkers: 1. The question: What is ---> the fastest way of learning. A. Answer: The fastest way to learn, is to learn how to learn. 2. What is learning? A. Learning=input. B. Input must be retained, input = memory. C. What drives memory? 3. Memory A. Retained knowledge depends on meaning, motive, and drive. B. Meaning, motive, and drive decides what knowledge is retained, therefore.... 4. Learning is personal and dependent upon: A. What you want to know B. Why you want to know it C. What you have to gain or lose 5. Archetypical principles: A. This video is about memory tricks, but the usefulness is limited. We learn that which we seek, and we seek what matters the most. Therefore, motive is principal in learning....it can't be conjured through mental gymnastics, it's internal. An insatiable curiosity to understand gives meaning, insofar as the discovery serves a personal purpose. Period. Without motive, learning is artificial, stagnant. 6. Failed learning. A. Failure to learn is indicative of inadequate passion/motivation. 7. Solution: A. Motive/passion ---> subject matter ---> memory --> learning ---> proficiency ---> career.
I want you to know you have no clue as to what I really know... And each time I see Jon Cena, we laugh together about all the things you don't know like John's name is really jaun. Juan Wayne!
Best way to literally memorize entire books with enough patience and a bit of imagination: visualise what you're reading. Like really visualise what is that you're reading and make connections. Try it with this video by visualizing and connecting every word to a whole.
It was really nice to listen to the sounds of the audience when they startet talking to each other,in about 2 minutts into this video, I dont know why,but it just made me feel happy. The sounds of engaged humans when they just play and relax, thats a good sound!
I get you, its so much better living near a large stadium packed over the weekend. like white noise. comforting knowing your surrounded and not alone I guess, or it only feels like that
Who else remembered the 10 words in the r8 order? I did😀 Like this :- Beard is an Object - Jacket is an object - jacket rhymes with Secret - secret has an Edge - after edge is Nothing - a romantic Date is nothing for a single person (me😂) - all Band performances have a date - band performances are often occupied with Punch(alcohol) - and the last word is Gas Just pictured it in my head like a line of connections
Nice talk. In recent years, many schools have taken to "visualization" to enable students to learn and retain the information for longer periods of time. This also goes with the belief in psychology, that most people have a good eidetic memory, so people can easily relate to information which is shown in graphic form, than in letters / alphabetic characters. This is why story books for very young kids are always pictorial and not verbose, as it's for adults. Besides making learning more fun through pictures, it also helps kids understand and retain the information better. The same goes for comic strips and such. Moreover, there are many tutorial websites / mobile apps, which present complex theoretical concepts pictorially / graphically, which makes them easier to understand and relate to. This is how education should be imparted. Also, as Ricardo rightly says, people have forgotten the art of remembering things. There was a time I could remember all the phone numbers, birthdays, etc. of my near & dear ones. But, after the "smartphone culture" was unleashed upon us, it's hard for me to remember even my secondary mobile numbers :-)
Hey all; I learned this when I was in college back in the early '90s. It absolutely works and, believe it or not, the more you use it, the faster you can memorize. Your brain will remember 10x more than you think IF you use the correct technique. I went from flunking a Sr. level class to 94% in one semester. I used it at the beginning of this video and got all my words right lol. I once impressed a table of 20 people by naming them all at the end of the event. Creativity and imagination are the keys. Research this more and have fun.
Start with your 'long term' memory sequence. These become the "place holders" for what you want to memorize. Ricardo used his body... you can use items in your car (in sequence), your house, neighborhood - anything permanent. Then bind each new bit of information with action to the existing object. The more nonsensical and sensory (smell, taste, pain) the easier it is to recall. Using action you bind the new information to the old/long term known information. You actually deal with MUCH more information, but have MUCH better recall. Quantity doesn't mean anything (says something about our minds). We think we can't memorize a lot of information (not true). First thing you have to do is stop saying you can't memorize anything and encourage your mind - it can do a LOT more than you think. :) Want to memorize someones name... you just met John; he has curly eyebrows, so turn his name (long term memory) into an image and combine (with action) with his eyebrows. Voila, next time you see John, you remember you clogged a toilet trying to flush those curly eyebrows down the toilet. Just don't tell him you thought all that! He'll appreciate you remembered his name! ok back to my day. Cheers all.
I remember I was sitting with 2 other girls in a library. We had an exam the next period. Studying in silence individually was boring. So I thought it would be cool to gossip of what we knew already about the exam to eachother. So we gossiped and learned as much as we could. It was silly but fun. We all passed the exam. Try it some time.
I passed my nursing finals through a student nurse emergency get together in nurses res block the day before we sat our exam . Abdominal paracentesis was the topic , we bounced off facts and experiences and enjoyed the social collaboration. To our delight it came up on the exam paper ! I swear to this day that’s how we got through ! 5 failed in the total group and the nurses not present had to resit !
I remember so much from school, I was drilled A student who additionally was remembering things, learning things for fun and because I thought I would need it in future. When I was 13 I remembered all american states in alphabetical order on one summer vacation day because I was bored and I thought it would prove to be useful in life as America is influential country in the world. I lived in the Balkans in Europe. I didn't use such methods or anything. I repeated until I had it memorised once and for all. It took maybe an hour or something. Sometimes I recall it to see if I still can do it and I always do it very quickly speaking, counting them automatically without any imagination (I have great imagination, but here it's not necessary for some "tricks" or whatever). Until day of today, today I'm 29, I can recite them all perfectly and know where they are, even though alphabetical order is not intuitive way for finding them all on map. Don't go shortway, if your goal is permanent learning. Also reciting out loud can be useful for memorising the melody of what you are saying. This is just one example, but a good example of boring facts that you can remember if you put mindwork to it and have a longterm goal. PS, the experience of excersise from this video was a bit PsYcHeDeLiC... 😋
I don't memorize data for the sake of memorizing. Someone in college I knew could recite the names of all the governors of North Carolina. I told him I knew where I could look it up. I had more interesting things to remember.
@@bite-sizedshorts9635 well, yes , it's not really needed to memorise "useless" things like that. However, I would argue it's a good excercise for brain to memorise things rather than rely on other sources for later retrieval of information. You never know when good memory that you can rely on even in critical situations under stress, can come in handy.
This strategy is impressive to people who hear this mnemotechnic solution for the first time, but in most learning situations the brain doesn't work this way easily enough to make up stories and remember all of them. It's a pretty good idea to use it once in a blue moon, but not on a daily basis.
Given enough time investment, you can create a weird story for just about any information. The main problem I have with this is the extra level of indirection between request and retrieval of information. Makes it: 1. Take a few moments longer to recall than if it were really burned into memory. 2. Makes it harder to use as a foundation for other knowledge. Example: If you have to think "velocity" as a burning meteor falling towards earth at a given speed and direction... Well you have to re-invoke that imagery every time you look at equations using vectors. It's like your brain is running on a scripting language rather than something closer to the metal, because of the extra layer of abstraction.
My secret to learning whole books... first change your perception of the problem (to learn a book) don't say your learning a book say your learning a TOPIC (this is your start point eg MEMORY) Second
This technique will not help master the expectation of five chapters worth of lecture material for an examination. That's where life has no shortcuts. Study hard, do your best to retain the information, and remain optimistic when the scan sheets are beginning to be passed out by your instructor.
Eclectic Reader you can use this to memorise the sub-headings and key words. you would have understood the material by then.. so all you need to do is to eloborate it! I'm a medical student and this technique is very useful. this is just needed to pass exams. as you practice, you'll master them anyway in the long run.. 😊
This technique is useful for studying, learning and retaining college level material. This is linked memory that is being discussed. Nothing much happens in a vacuum, a person always has some knowledge already of a subject they are endeavouring to learn. So, when linking memory to a little story or parts of your body, ... well it may not be like the story he told in his presentation. Every new fact a person learns is better founded and more lasting if linked to a body of know. For example if you're learn the bones in the human body every person has intimate knowledge of those bones, as they know how their body moves and it's form.
Bhuvanashree Nagaraja As a student u can get it done for individual subjects before you write exams. But as a doctor in practice, you may not be able to get it done when it comes to recollecting the enzyme deficiency which you had read 5 years back. You have 19 subjects. For doctors, the only efficient technique is Feymann's. Learn, teach, practice, repeat!! Do this until you can recollect data from a spinal level like a reflex!! You don't make up a story to remember your phone number right.. Have your medical knowledge like your phone number!! Good luck to be an amazing doctor in future!
Accounting is the same thing. Learn, practice, teach, repeat. You don't know the basics of a income statement without first knowing that revenues comes first than expenses. And the difference becomes your net income which transitions into the statement of retained earnings, then the balance sheet and cash flows. Knowing this stuff will allow you to understand how to begin merging the financials of acquisitions. There can easily be as many as 30-50 different accounts. You can't just choose a body part or something. You need to be able to visualize and have real world examples. Accounting topics: Ethics accounting basics (accounting is different from the U.S and the rest of the world) intermediate accounting advance accounting government accounting auditing taxation both individual and entities (businesses) Plus many other classes such as knowing accounting programs like quickbooks, or taking some finance classes (which is not the same as accounting but can be similar)
The way Hidden Time Wealth dives into the concept of productivity is mind-blowing. Hidden Time Wealth tips are pure gold, and I wish more people knew about them.
This is called memorising through pictures. It makes pictographic memory which our brain can retain for longer time. But the problem comes when u have to memorise more words. It's like we can make code for words to memorise but what would happen if u have to learn a book full of words.
In this competitive world, it is a must to be sharp and smart enough to tackle things. Thanks for the video elaborating the tricks and the process that you have undergone. Every student can have a look at it to make their learning simple and fun.
in the med school this way of memorization is called TAHSHISH as we memorize many items by linking them to each other through a story .this is an effective way.
I used chunking to memorize the first list, but mind palace is a good way to memorize too. The best is still raw repetition, because we are hardwired to be able to predict what happens in the future, so the more we see something, the more important it becomes in our memory.
It’s not the only way. Lots of people have their own ways and they work too like .. mnemonics / byhearting etc.. Good job.. if you are helping kids in school.. then it’s a great thing you are doing👏👏👏
already knew about visualization and got 8/10 right at the start :P I imagined a guy with a beard using an object which was a comb to comb his beard, he then wore a jacket and whispered a secret in someones ear, fell off the edge of a cliff, into nothingness, then he landed at a table in a restaurant with a date, there was a band playing at the restaurant, and he got in a fight with someone over his date and punched him, and when he got home he was gassy from the food. haha
@@octarei2433 Aunque los ponga si o si no se puede llegar a comprender por el simple hecho del experimento que dice en el video de cerrar los ojos o leer consentradamente y no sentir bien lo que dice, si Oriana lo comprendió tan fácilmente es por la simple razón de que ella sabe ingles.
I imagined a man with a BEARD, Holding a metallic OBJECT, wearing a JACKET, he had a hat with a SECRET message under it, he was standing on the EDGE of a mountain :) FIRST FIVE WORDS
My memory is so bad that I forget everything I read in a second 😑 sometimes I read and forget at same time it's reading and understanding and not understanding what u read 😪😦😑
You came as a blessing. I was having hard time with memorising. But your trick made it easier. I hope it will help me crack my exams. InshahAllah. Thanks a lot...!!!
SUMMARY: 1.MEMORY PALACE 2.Use power of VISUALISATION (make ur memory photograhic) 3. Whatever you learn, relate it to something for long term learning
This can be really helpful specially for chemistry if you have to learn the periodic table or, if you have to memorize concepts, you can create a story with the name of those concepts. But when it's long paragraph, the best way is to read as many times as you need to understand it and try to explain with your own words!
Another wonderful trip down memory lane. I'd forgotten how many times I'd seen this one, but it's a classic none the less. Keep up the good work Tedx Haarlam, I think you are going to do big thing ❤
I never realised my mom actually did this to help me. I have ADD and had a hard time focussing on learning words/terms, for example french words. I would have a hard time focussing because with ADD you get easily distracted from just repeating words. So when I asked my mom for help she would do the words and whenever I didnt remember one of the words, she would relate it to something or make a joke about it. This made me remember those words even easier then the words I could remember. I dont know if she did this on purpose, but this helped me so much and this just hit me as im watching this video.
25years back, my brother memorized his high school exams through 1st letter short-coding or this kind of picturization-story building / mind imaging I followed this technique too to score as topper Time plays a role to showcase the latter people take credit of this ancient technique😉
For the first experiment, i made a phrase with all the words and only missed 2. My sentence was: The *bearded* *object* had a *jacket* with a *secret edge* with *nothing* but a *date* with a *band* but got *punched* with *gas*
Same!Mine was The man with the beard holding an object and wearing a jacket told me a secret about when he jumped of the edge into nothing where he say his date and a band. He punched them and then reafulled his cars gas.
There was a man with a beard wearing a jacket with an object in it. He was holding onto a secret that had him on edge. He felt like he had nothing left to live for because he had yet another bad date, he got kicked out of his band for punching someone, and then he ran out of gas. It was a bad day.
i just doubled up the words: my beard is an object, my jacket has a secret (inside), at the edge there was nothing, i dated the whole band, and i punched the air (gas).
I've applied this technique a few weeks ago, and I've to admit guys, it really worked well! LYK counterintuitively, i never expected that this would help me with my learning languages routine! It's a gain or share experience place, not a joke or a meme thing here! Gain knowledge or leave(with out commenting anything)!
Here's an irony. I'm a med student and tomorrow I have got an exam and out of nowhere this video is in my suggestion list. And here I'm in a dilemma whether I should keep on studying or spend my crucial 17 minutes to memorize stuffs more effectively.
The reason why memorization isn’t needed, is because nowadays tests are about the process. solving problems, versus memorizing definitions. Finding connections and using inferences rather than memorizing definitions.
The trick to increasing memory is something I taught myself after a subarachnoid brain hemorrhage. The trick: remember like women do automatically, Associate moments with emotion as soon as possible
Good idea. I think Ted is really a good platform for me to see many excellent people's speeches. They often teach some very practical skills or introduce new things. Thank you for your video and sharing.
I learnt a list of 100 random words using this technique and I was able to recite them forwards or backwards or starting from anywhere I the middle going either direction. It was a fascinating process.
Omg I was closing my eyes for the second exercise and (mind you I'm using earphones) I'm listening to a soft calming voice and out of nowhere I get a frieght because an ad pops comes on... I swear they did it on purpose 🤣🤣🤣🤣
1st of all great speech 👏👏👏👏 2nd iam aware of this great method of memorizing since school days but the prob is i couldnot really apply it on memorizing science like biology and chemistry, or pharmacology as we have memorize alot of dry names with side effects and indications..
Closed my eyes, took a deep breath only to hear an ad follow after
LMFAOO SAME I closed my eyes to picture what he was saying but I got scared shitless 😭
same I got LinkedIn ad 😂😂
I closed my eyes.. Then heard the tik-tok of heels of a woman and I'm like wtf
Idk why, but I laughed so hard at this comment! 🤣😂
@@HappilyAnonymousGirl For me, it was really embarrassing. Sheesh! Like can’t I just follow along with a video in peace? 😭
I love how UA-cam recommends this video the day before my exams
xdr when it’s too late😅
UA-cam algorithm
What are you doing on UA-cam a day before exam?
Sameeee
Same here! Tomorrow is my biology exam and here I am 🤷🏻♀️
Short summary:
- When you imagine bizarre stories it becomes a lot easier to remember.
- If you tie this stories with place where you know very well (like your body or room) memorizing things on order become a lot easier.
- Everyone can improve yourself by experimenting (your age is doesn't matter)
- Find a new different methods to improve yourself and applying it in your life to see how it work for you.
- With experiments in your life you will be better not only in particular skill, but also it skill to learn new thing. It will impact to your hobbies, work, relationships - to all you life.
Dude we have the same profile picture! What are the odds! I mean they're above zero but still, it's not a picture people commonly use a profile pic. In fact, you're the first one I've seen use it. And I've been using it for years.
Thank you so much! You helped me save my time!
Thanks, you saved my time.
Thank you for saving time)
Thank you!
There's a book called Hidden Time Wealth, and it talks about how using some secret techniques, you can overcome procrastination and accomplish anything in life. It's not just a bunch of empty promises; it's the real deal.
Spam bot!
Who is the author?
The author is SCAM!
Conclusion: Use visualisation and images to learn, whatever u learn relate it with Something interesting.
How do I visualize maths and Economics
Thanku you save my 16 minutes
Damn if that's what the video was about I feel like that was common sense useless TED talk
@@majormerc economics is kinda easy to do, but idk about maths lol
@ItsMeAgain TV Damn I hope you got your permit but I would have told you had I seen this last week the best way to study for the CDL permit test is to take online practice test over and over and over until you get to 100% correct answer and it will all make sense to you then. I had the same problem, i'm a visual person too. I really don't like reading unless it's something i'm very interested in. Got my CDL's last year using that method because the first time I took "General knowledge" I failed.
my memory is so bad that I forgot I watched this video before
😂😂
hehe
Me too..
Mee too
Josip Stanić you are too funny
Very helpful, thank you! My memory effectively tripled: 0x3=0
Haahaahaa
@@Flashtiger1995 lol
HAHAHAHAHAHA
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
😂😂😂😂😂😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂😂😂🤣😂😂
I’m 75 and I love to keep learning and growing. One word of caution though: there is not one single method, including yours, that works for everyone.
There is no single best way. A lot depends on being able to imagine and then finding your own way, as you found yours. These may be tools we can all use, but they are not the only way it happens, and for some people, maybe not the best.
I have zero visual memory, I can't even imagine in my mind nor draw people close to me, except that I know they have a head, eyes, nose and mouth lol. However my audio memory is much much better.
If a person's memory is compromised due to conditions such as dementia there is nothing that can prevent that unless we find a cure.
I agree sir
Individual differences need Individual methods.
I want to be like you when I'm 75
You know as well as I do that when we were in school in the 50s/60s no one had any concern if we learned memory techniques or not. If a student didn't do well it was "well boys aren't any good at reading/English, and girls can't do math, so they need to be in the secretary-Home Ec track". What memory techniques do IMO are help relieve anxiety.
How to memorize stuff easier for real:
Long passages or phrases: type it out and read through it, then change the font and read through it again, then go through and change the font color of the end of some words to white. ex: the word "memorize" would look like "m " then try reading through it again, maybe change the font again or font size, keep getting rid of the end of words until you have almost the entire passage changed to blank space and word beginnings. This helps you memorize the words and phrases themselves and changing fonts helps you to remember words in relation to the sentence and not the location on the page, our brains like to take shortcuts wherever possible.
Object pairings (ex how to know which name matches up to different groupings): for this you will need to memorize truly at least one or two things. When trying to remember object pairings, try to remember relationships of one thing to another. Think about the words themselves if all else fails. Are the words in alphabetical order when they appear in the right order? Reverse alphabetical order? Do the word sizes go from big to small, or vise versa? Does the series of things follow a pattern? Maybe the mneumonic just happens to follow the same first letters as your friend-group, the relationship doesn't have to be a typical one. Take the word "parallel", for example, the two L's make parallel lines. Your mind is always looking for the relationships between things, if you provide it even subtle ones, it is more likely to remember them.
Random other things: Making stories does help occasionally, but so does songs, visualizing things, drawing things out (maybe you're learning about Einstein's theory of relativity and you draw a cone that goes over a dog's head to help you remember the shape of mass in the space-time continuum, it doesn't always have to directly relate), picturing things on different parts of your body so you remember it when you look at that part of yourself, prolonged occasional exposure, linking memories or locations with what you wish to remember, thinking of it abstractly and relating it to real life (maybe you just measured something at 6 3/4 inches and you need to remember that for your project you're working on, imagine what you'll be doing in 6 3/4 hours or what you'd buy with $6 3/4 and you'll remember the object or thing you'd be doing far better than the numbers). There are lots of small things that your brain can cling to and make up far easier than a complicated story, and your needs vary per occasion so your memorizing tactics probably will too.
I hope this helps! I've personally found it easier than the one-size-fits-all storytelling tactic that we're often taught.
I actually learned what u wrote on how much I kept on saying it cuz I can't understand 😂😂😂😂😂
The only comment which has less likes then my comment 😂😂
@@wrongplays9576 It's not a competition, I just wanted to help make people's lives easier any way I could.
Legend
@@madisonreuter4422 Sushila dear you really did 😚
I could only memorise 4 of 10 items on my first attempt. Then i watched the rest of the video, and learned how to triple my memory. Now i can remember twelve out of ten.
Wow!
Wait wha-
n o you did not just do that
Oh you did it boy 👏👏👏
Amazingly talented (eye roll)
😂🤣
Haha my ninja
Is Anyone looking for English comment???😀
Here it is! It's really helpful!
Hi
Yes it’s really helpful.
@@serxuegoldisprettyuselessi2683 hi!😀
@@rajtechking yes, indeed!
Man! WTF is that above ☝☝
I saw this man perform his spontaneous poetry in a very lovely resort on Langkawi some years ago. He was a brilliant wordsmith with his quick wit - a charming most unusual entertainer and Ive never forgotten him as one of the most talented and unusual performers Ive ever seen Now he is challenging my mind as well as entertaining me - what growth of a very unique skill
In Malaysia?
“Triple my memory?” Bro 0x3 is still 0
Lol
🤣🤣🤣
lol hahahaa it made my day
You made my day and Im watching at 3am lol
You can’t have zero memory
Him: with all the technologies around, why do we need to memorize?
Med school: *I happened to exist*
What did you do? Found any answers
This is actually why I am watching this video lol I don't want to die in med school
Honestly
Plz suggest if u hv any simple way of learning faster
It helps to memorize things as we are short on time. Imagine if you can memorize your patients names, wouldn’t that make your life easier? What if you have a treatment or drug name intuitively memorized... you save yourselves time by looking it up. Tech is for reminding you, clarifying details, and quick and safe transmission of new research. (Think Google). However I would absolutely love to increase my memory power and it’s best others do as well. Lol even forgetting has its own benefits... but let’s not get me started
6:25 is the part you were waiting for
ok
Thanks savior
Thx man
You can see me???😅
Thank YOU
Im lazy to wait till the point that im watching this video for
Everyone is gangsta until they open their chemistry lab manual or block chemistry for jee ….Indians can relate
bhaiii F true !
Salt analysis 😂😂😵
Lol 😆
😂😂😂😂
Nope.
Everybody is gangsta until they take (and hopefully pass) Pchem
whenever i used to create stories to memorise anything, i used to forget the stories themselves later on..
True
Try to imagine the story as if it was a film, then try to write the main keywords of this story,that might help!
@sola 😂😂
Eman Ekram I also forget movies 😁
Daaaamn XD
like si vienes por Ori de mierda
pd: nunca pensé hacer este tipo de comentarios de mierda xd
che tiene subtitulos en español xddd
@@ubreak5265 of o Wu l
@@angelgabrielleal9850 xD
Dear Mr. Ricardo Lieuw On, I am now a retired spine surgeon. I took my first course in mnemonics after I finished my internship. I was very angry that this is not a federal requirement to be taught in all schools. The time, energy and resources that would be improved boggles my imagination. The ripple effect on ideas, inventions and books goes through the roof. Please do everything you can to make a federal law that these techniques be taught in all schools. Thank you.🙂
Hi. retired medic here. Agreed. I've been saying similar for 40 years. IT gives some muscle, but not fleetfooted enough. They should do a pilot, maybe one med school. Regards from UK.
Grow a spine and do it yourself. 😂
Tell me about it. Could teach better material. Some stuff that actually comes in handy for the real world.
Theodore👍🏾you are my friend
"The art of learning" Thank you, Ricardo, for this amazing presentation. You're a great teacher! (which IMO is an art form as well; The art of teaching) + ReMind sounds like an incredible initiative. Bravo! 🙏🏽😃❤
it took me 4 minutes to realize the title said "memory" not "Money" smh
Lol.
Means you need some ....
Like 5 or 15 millions ..... 😉
I realized it reading your comment :-|
haha. same here
Same here! I thought it said triple money😅
Memorizing while studying is not a good habit but understanding it. When you learn/understand it, it is automatically saved in your brain.
Yes, this is a very important concept and how I did well in school, but can't remember my own life well. There are good times for this method though.
You can understand and still forget. Memory techniques are important esp if you are going to be tested
Some things just need to memorized, no need to understand e.g. some phone numbers or an address.
Try learning medicine notions without a technique ahahaha. There are long lists of details
Alah hu akhbar
Boom💥💥💥💥
No one, I repeat no one on this face of earth has explained to me the concept of memory palace better than this gentleman here. Thank you, sir! You have done a fantastic job!
thanks. I was trying to remember the term. I studied "Memory Master" tapes back in the 90's. Had forgotten...ha hah ha...as I tend to use humorous visualizations instead, and word play to cement things into memory.
This is a good method for memorising lists of unrelated items, but it doesn’t account for the fact that most things that we learn are also first UNDERSTOOD, not just memorised. In fact, understanding what you want to remember is the first step that you should do.
You havent got the point of the video. By doing that he tried to explain that there's not only one way to learn, but there's many ways an the only way to find those out is to experiment and find the methods that best suit you.
@@angonuts7492 oh, that's true! I still think that he should have spent more time showing different possibilities though
Self-awareness + growth mindset
Yes, this is so true. While the video gives tips on how to memorize, F52's point is very valid. It is important to understand not simply memorize.
@@f52_yeevy here's the thing, after learning something new. Just memorize that information through imagination so you'll always remember it. And then the more you process it the more it becomes part of the subconscious mind. Hence, part of the long term memory.
Let me appeal to deep thinkers:
1. The question: What is ---> the fastest way of learning.
A. Answer: The fastest way to learn, is to learn how to learn.
2. What is learning?
A. Learning=input.
B. Input must be retained, input = memory.
C. What drives memory?
3. Memory
A. Retained knowledge depends on meaning, motive, and drive.
B. Meaning, motive, and drive decides what knowledge is retained, therefore....
4. Learning is personal and dependent upon:
A. What you want to know
B. Why you want to know it
C. What you have to gain or lose
5. Archetypical principles:
A. This video is about memory tricks, but the usefulness is limited. We learn that which we seek, and we seek what matters the most. Therefore, motive is principal in learning....it can't be conjured through mental gymnastics, it's internal. An insatiable curiosity to understand gives meaning, insofar as the discovery serves a personal purpose. Period. Without motive, learning is artificial, stagnant.
6. Failed learning.
A. Failure to learn is indicative of inadequate passion/motivation.
7. Solution:
A. Motive/passion ---> subject matter ---> memory --> learning ---> proficiency ---> career.
Nice paragraphing. I read through all this much easily than I usually do.
Could not explain it any better, nice!
Wow. Just simply, WOW.
This was a huge lightbulb moment for me. Thanks for sharing
cool
I think this is one of the best comments I have read.
"I want you to think of someone you know called John..."
I think of John Cena...
"I want you to see him..."
...and you couldn't see him😂
I want you to know you have no clue as to what I really know...
And each time I see Jon Cena, we laugh together about all the things you don't know like John's name is really jaun. Juan Wayne!
😭😭😂😂😂 ded
I think of John Wick.
Ill think about john romero... he made doom and i like that game
Best way to literally memorize entire books with enough patience and a bit of imagination: visualise what you're reading. Like really visualise what is that you're reading and make connections. Try it with this video by visualizing and connecting every word to a whole.
Memorized the entire script of Casablanca.
@@r_1901 i memorized my birthday
Can’t. Aphantasia.
Wait thats only way i have read my whole life, to understand what i read.... is there other ways to read???
@@andresbados5106 🤣🤣🤣
It was really nice to listen to the sounds of the audience when they startet talking to each other,in about 2 minutts into this video, I dont know why,but it just made me feel happy. The sounds of engaged humans when they just play and relax, thats a good sound!
I get you, its so much better living near a large stadium packed over the weekend. like white noise. comforting knowing your surrounded and not alone I guess, or it only feels like that
How many of you are scrolling down to check whether it works or not 😂
me😂😂
Me too 🤣🤣🤣😂
Me lol
Just saved 15 minutes, thx
Yeah this guys boring
Him: remember this 10 words in order
Me: trying to remember it
My brain: don't you even dare think about that
😂
For real though
You made my night 😂😂😂😂
Correct🤣
LMAO
My Brain memorizing for Exams : *smol pp*
My Brain remembering every single meme that I encountered since 5 years : *BIG PP*
slap like now
EPICO
that's because you understand the meme and enjoy learning it (as compared to studying, which you probably think of as torture)
Samuel Miller?
di vhnnbnì87
Imagines John throwing the the sun on my feet*
Ad: "DID YOU KNOW YOU CAN COOK A PIZZA IN 12 SECONDS??"
Haha bro. Sound funny
Me: the sun on my feet.
Ad: imagine the woman who you really want to be.
Me: bothered…writing this comment/reply…switching off.
same here🤣🤣😂😂
Who else remembered the 10 words in the r8 order? I did😀
Like this :-
Beard is an Object - Jacket is an object - jacket rhymes with Secret - secret has an Edge - after edge is Nothing - a romantic Date is nothing for a single person (me😂) - all Band performances have a date - band performances are often occupied with Punch(alcohol) - and the last word is Gas
Just pictured it in my head like a line of connections
I managed 9;)
I was going to comment but then forgot what I was going to say...
Were you going to say that you saw MONEY instead of MEMORY in the title?
R0I3I3IE happens to me all the time.
🤣🤣😅
You can triple your memory, than make more money... and than triple your money to buy more memories... like micro sd
ahhh. hmmm. .... I had something to respond to as well.
Nice talk. In recent years, many schools have taken to "visualization" to enable students to learn and retain the information for longer periods of time. This also goes with the belief in psychology, that most people have a good eidetic memory, so people can easily relate to information which is shown in graphic form, than in letters / alphabetic characters. This is why story books for very young kids are always pictorial and not verbose, as it's for adults. Besides making learning more fun through pictures, it also helps kids understand and retain the information better. The same goes for comic strips and such. Moreover, there are many tutorial websites / mobile apps, which present complex theoretical concepts pictorially / graphically, which makes them easier to understand and relate to. This is how education should be imparted. Also, as Ricardo rightly says, people have forgotten the art of remembering things. There was a time I could remember all the phone numbers, birthdays, etc. of my near & dear ones. But, after the "smartphone culture" was unleashed upon us, it's hard for me to remember even my secondary mobile numbers :-)
Its look like you are talking not just about yourself. But about every student
unfortunately it doesnt help students at all
WOW for some reason this moved me emotionally ... this message must hit so close to my heart ... THANKS SO MUCH!!!!!!
6:25 to save you some time 🥰
Thanks
Thank you
Doja cat*
f, you mean, do not attend the ukg class and jump into the 1st class lol directly. btw nice comment ! ;)
Thank you ☺️🤗
I've watched this vedieo twice and my memory effectively increased upto 6 times
But what can you remember? just lists?
ur memory might have got better but your maths definitely didnt
Sure will it be 9 times.
Bhai upsc pakka tera😅
Mi memoria se triplicó 0x3=0
Bueno al menos aprendiste a multiplicar! Un gran avance😂
te copiaste de un comentario en ingles
Alguien me explica que es lo que dijo el tipo (se que tiene subtítulos y ya lo vi, pero no lo supe interpretar)
@@fatimabartholdy5266 Miralo varias veces hasta que lo entemdas, es mucho mejor como lo exllica el a como lo explicaria cualquiera de nosotros
Any English readers understand this and laughing 😂😂😂
There's actually a book about this. It's call " How to Learn Almost Anything in 48 Hours" By Tansel Ali
Hey all; I learned this when I was in college back in the early '90s. It absolutely works and, believe it or not, the more you use it, the faster you can memorize. Your brain will remember 10x more than you think IF you use the correct technique. I went from flunking a Sr. level class to 94% in one semester. I used it at the beginning of this video and got all my words right lol. I once impressed a table of 20 people by naming them all at the end of the event. Creativity and imagination are the keys. Research this more and have fun.
good comment, im 40 and heading to uc texas worried, but this coming from someone that used it in college gives me hope.
Start with your 'long term' memory sequence. These become the "place holders" for what you want to memorize. Ricardo used his body... you can use items in your car (in sequence), your house, neighborhood - anything permanent. Then bind each new bit of information with action to the existing object. The more nonsensical and sensory (smell, taste, pain) the easier it is to recall. Using action you bind the new information to the old/long term known information. You actually deal with MUCH more information, but have MUCH better recall. Quantity doesn't mean anything (says something about our minds). We think we can't memorize a lot of information (not true). First thing you have to do is stop saying you can't memorize anything and encourage your mind - it can do a LOT more than you think. :) Want to memorize someones name... you just met John; he has curly eyebrows, so turn his name (long term memory) into an image and combine (with action) with his eyebrows. Voila, next time you see John, you remember you clogged a toilet trying to flush those curly eyebrows down the toilet. Just don't tell him you thought all that! He'll appreciate you remembered his name! ok back to my day. Cheers all.
Reg Staples i think you could have articulated the technique better than this boy in this video !
thank you for your encouragrment
Hei .I don't understand the last few minutes. That is "check, experience, experiment ".please help me if you are free.
I remember I was sitting with 2 other girls in a library. We had an exam the next period. Studying in silence individually was boring. So I thought it would be cool to gossip of what we knew already about the exam to eachother. So we gossiped and learned as much as we could. It was silly but fun. We all passed the exam. Try it some time.
To be honest I tried that with my friend and it does work ! It's easier to learn and remember stuff like that.
I passed my nursing finals through a student nurse emergency get together in nurses res block the day before we sat our exam . Abdominal paracentesis was the topic , we bounced off facts and experiences and enjoyed the social collaboration. To our delight it came up on the exam paper ! I swear to this day that’s how we got through ! 5 failed in the total group and the nurses not present had to resit !
Insta id? Will you help me?
I was listening to music and past out and woke up to this playing on my phone lol
hahahha
loooool
Where did you wake up?
Of all the things to have playing in your ear as you slept. I bet you had a pretty trippy dream before you woke up.
Lmfao
I remember so much from school, I was drilled A student who additionally was remembering things, learning things for fun and because I thought I would need it in future. When I was 13 I remembered all american states in alphabetical order on one summer vacation day because I was bored and I thought it would prove to be useful in life as America is influential country in the world. I lived in the Balkans in Europe. I didn't use such methods or anything. I repeated until I had it memorised once and for all. It took maybe an hour or something. Sometimes I recall it to see if I still can do it and I always do it very quickly speaking, counting them automatically without any imagination (I have great imagination, but here it's not necessary for some "tricks" or whatever). Until day of today, today I'm 29, I can recite them all perfectly and know where they are, even though alphabetical order is not intuitive way for finding them all on map. Don't go shortway, if your goal is permanent learning. Also reciting out loud can be useful for memorising the melody of what you are saying. This is just one example, but a good example of boring facts that you can remember if you put mindwork to it and have a longterm goal.
PS, the experience of excersise from this video was a bit PsYcHeDeLiC... 😋
I don't memorize data for the sake of memorizing. Someone in college I knew could recite the names of all the governors of North Carolina. I told him I knew where I could look it up. I had more interesting things to remember.
@@bite-sizedshorts9635 well, yes , it's not really needed to memorise "useless" things like that. However, I would argue it's a good excercise for brain to memorise things rather than rely on other sources for later retrieval of information. You never know when good memory that you can rely on even in critical situations under stress, can come in handy.
Funny comments. It's about memorizing which is a small subset of studying. Memorizing does not replace understanding.
This strategy is impressive to people who hear this mnemotechnic solution for the first time, but in most learning situations the brain doesn't work this way easily enough to make up stories and remember all of them. It's a pretty good idea to use it once in a blue moon, but not on a daily basis.
Given enough time investment, you can create a weird story for just about any information.
The main problem I have with this is the extra level of indirection between request and retrieval of information.
Makes it:
1. Take a few moments longer to recall than if it were really burned into memory.
2. Makes it harder to use as a foundation for other knowledge.
Example: If you have to think "velocity" as a burning meteor falling towards earth at a given speed and direction... Well you have to re-invoke that imagery every time you look at equations using vectors. It's like your brain is running on a scripting language rather than something closer to the metal, because of the extra layer of abstraction.
practice till it becomes second nature, 1 day of practicing probably good enough to make it a skill you can rely on
Works great for bullsh*ters and journalists.
Normally I just use the first letters of every word
For examples, Bojse
Beard
Object
Jacket
Secret
Edge
And memorize what every letter stands for.
Yep same, but that's still not applicable for math though
@@netherbrickfence4632 Actually look for "PEMDAS" in google and you will see it applies to everything :P. I use/used this way of memorizing too
We use the same technique
BOJSE
NDBPG
And that's it
I made a song tune out of it and was able to memorize the first 6 words
Why is it people are ready to pull down something, especially when they have nothing better to offer in return? Thanks for your effort mate!
I know this method but it's not worked with a bunch of books.
LOL, nice YT name...
hahahah sooo true 😅😅
My secret to learning whole books...
first change your perception of the problem (to learn a book) don't say your learning a book say your learning a TOPIC (this is your start point eg MEMORY)
Second
@@borntodoit8744 continue 😡
His technique is mentally exhausting. Check out Mattias Ribbing
This technique will not help master the expectation of five chapters worth of lecture material for an examination.
That's where life has no shortcuts. Study hard, do your best to retain the information, and remain optimistic when the scan sheets are beginning to be passed out by your instructor.
Eclectic Reader you can use this to memorise the sub-headings and key words. you would have understood the material by then.. so all you need to do is to eloborate it! I'm a medical student and this technique is very useful. this is just needed to pass exams. as you practice, you'll master them anyway in the long run.. 😊
This technique is useful for studying, learning and retaining college level material. This is linked memory that is being discussed. Nothing much happens in a vacuum, a person always has some knowledge already of a subject they are endeavouring to learn. So, when linking memory to a little story or parts of your body, ... well it may not be like the story he told in his presentation. Every new fact a person learns is better founded and more lasting if linked to a body of know. For example if you're learn the bones in the human body every person has intimate knowledge of those bones, as they know how their body moves and it's form.
Bhuvanashree Nagaraja As a student u can get it done for individual subjects before you write exams. But as a doctor in practice, you may not be able to get it done when it comes to recollecting the enzyme deficiency which you had read 5 years back. You have 19 subjects. For doctors, the only efficient technique is Feymann's. Learn, teach, practice, repeat!! Do this until you can recollect data from a spinal level like a reflex!! You don't make up a story to remember your phone number right.. Have your medical knowledge like your phone number!! Good luck to be an amazing doctor in future!
I see all u care about is passing a test when you could learn things for life
Accounting is the same thing. Learn, practice, teach, repeat. You don't know the basics of a income statement without first knowing that revenues comes first than expenses. And the difference becomes your net income which transitions into the statement of retained earnings, then the balance sheet and cash flows.
Knowing this stuff will allow you to understand how to begin merging the financials of acquisitions.
There can easily be as many as 30-50 different accounts. You can't just choose a body part or something. You need to be able to visualize and have real world examples.
Accounting topics:
Ethics
accounting basics (accounting is different from the U.S and the rest of the world)
intermediate accounting
advance accounting
government accounting
auditing
taxation both individual and entities (businesses)
Plus many other classes such as knowing accounting programs like quickbooks, or taking some finance classes (which is not the same as accounting but can be similar)
I Think you are looking for an ENGLISH comment.weren't ya???
Yaaaaaaaassssssssssssssssssssss
Yed
lol yeaaaa
Yes
Nah, I understand spanish lmao
The way Hidden Time Wealth dives into the concept of productivity is mind-blowing. Hidden Time Wealth tips are pure gold, and I wish more people knew about them.
This is called memorising through pictures. It makes pictographic memory which our brain can retain for longer time. But the problem comes when u have to memorise more words. It's like we can make code for words to memorise but what would happen if u have to learn a book full of words.
Thats my question really. Can use this for a quick speech or two pages but not 4 law textbooks
Todo el mundo: ESTA EN INGLES ORIANAAAA
Yo: **pongo los subtitulos de manera sosegada**
Puse subtitulos pero igual entiendo 😂😂
Pongo los subtítulos pero tengo que cerrar los ojos como dice el chico este ahre
Pd: estudien inglés
@@oriirodriguez2556 que inteligente que sos eh
@@oriirodriguez2556 JAJAJA en ese momento cell sintió el veradero terror, Yo no entendí ni mrda así que nopude cerrar los ojos
SAME
Before watch this I have only 500 GB total space in my brain,
But now I have 2 TB of total space.
That is not how math works.
R/woooooosh
So you quadrupled not tripled
Wow you quadrupled your memory
R/woosh
In this competitive world, it is a must to be sharp and smart enough to tackle things. Thanks for the video elaborating the tricks and the process that you have undergone. Every student can have a look at it to make their learning simple and fun.
Oo yeah... You seem Awkward gurl
😮
Everything is possible if we try hard enough or at least better ourselves ✌️
Ah, nothing like a good ol’ ted x to make me feel like I’m not procrastinating.
in the med school this way of memorization is called TAHSHISH as we memorize many items by linking them to each other through a story .this is an effective way.
But walking us through that story took a LOT longer than 30 seconds!
And that form lots of story ......even more then your life story 😂😂😂
I know this is an old technique, I've heard of it decades ago.
But walking us through that story took a LOT longer than 30 seconds!
Exactly.
Hello Jeremy Shafer! I’ve been watching for years now! Love the videos.
Lol top comment
Exactly!!!!!!
Yes, making all the demo pretty useless. Using "stories" to remember things is excellent, but we knew this. This ted talk is of poor value.
I used chunking to memorize the first list, but mind palace is a good way to memorize too. The best is still raw repetition, because we are hardwired to be able to predict what happens in the future, so the more we see something, the more important it becomes in our memory.
It’s not the only way. Lots of people have their own ways and they work too like .. mnemonics / byhearting etc.. Good job.. if you are helping kids in school.. then it’s a great thing you are doing👏👏👏
already knew about visualization and got 8/10 right at the start :P I imagined a guy with a beard using an object which was a comb to comb his beard, he then wore a jacket and whispered a secret in someones ear, fell off the edge of a cliff, into nothingness, then he landed at a table in a restaurant with a date, there was a band playing at the restaurant, and he got in a fight with someone over his date and punched him, and when he got home he was gassy from the food. haha
Amazing I only got 6/10
How did you do it?
I got 7/10 , Just read it four to five times straight and remembered simple
I just remembered the words: bojs end bpg
ORIANA ME HICISTE VENIR ACA Y ESTA TODO EN INGLES NO ENTIENDO UN PINGO
pone los subtítulos
X2
Poné los subtítulos ura
Por mas de que ponga los subtitulos no puede hacer el experimento de cerrar los ojos
@@octarei2433 Aunque los ponga si o si no se puede llegar a comprender por el simple hecho del experimento que dice en el video de cerrar los ojos o leer consentradamente y no sentir bien lo que dice, si Oriana lo comprendió tan fácilmente es por la simple razón de que ella sabe ingles.
This worked really well for me! I have a horrible memory and this is actually helping! It would be great if there was an app!
I imagined a man with a BEARD, Holding a metallic OBJECT, wearing a JACKET, he had a hat with a SECRET message under it, he was standing on the EDGE of a mountain :) FIRST FIVE WORDS
Good to know I was not the only one who did that 😂
👍
My memory is so bad that I forget everything I read in a second 😑 sometimes I read and forget at same time it's reading and understanding and not understanding what u read 😪😦😑
ayee same i learned this in leadership classes
Congratulations!!! That's called linking memory under the Shichida Method right brain training.
You came as a blessing. I was having hard time with memorising. But your trick made it easier. I hope it will help me crack my exams. InshahAllah.
Thanks a lot...!!!
Alah hu akhbar
Booom💥💥💥💥
How to tripple your memory
Current memory multiplied by 3,
i.e. 0*3 = 0
Congratulations!! ._.
Sirijan Thakur 😂😂😂😂😂😂
I was going to comment something on this, but I forgot what I wanted to say.
Siri
Deciding whether to watch the video or not... This was my first argument😂😂
Shabaz mohd Khan we see ಎದ್ದರೆ dfe
When John threw the sun on my feet !!
An ad poped up😂😂😂😂
I'll honestly forget this advice minutes after watching it
That’s because you haven’t learned how to learn and you’re not smart enough to take notes
@@Adamfindstalent ouch
Then you are a hopeless case!
All memory is based on Location,Imagination and Association..improve them and your memory will improve..that's it ..no mystery..just hard work!
So.... how does this help me memorize a thermodynamics problem -,-
Don't memorize the problem, memorize the process.
drOGdre Actually don't memorize the process. Understand how it happens.
Do both
Don't understand how it happens. "To conquer thermodynamics, you must become thermodynamics.
don't become thermodynamics, destroy it
SUMMARY:
1.MEMORY PALACE
2.Use power of VISUALISATION (make ur memory photograhic)
3. Whatever you learn, relate it to something for long term learning
I bought The Mega Memory course back when it came out and then forgot where I put it. 😖
Para todos los que dicen que no saben inglés espero que sepan poner subtitulos
DOOOOOOOOU TIRA BEFF
Claro y cuando el man dice que cierren los ojos para imaginar los subs sirven demasiado po pelotudx
Lo mismo digo bro a mi se me pusieron automatico xdxd
@@angelgabrielleal9850 Uhhh que nene estupido, te digo algo?? Y si no cerras los ojos? Un nobel de física te mereces
@@angelgabrielleal9850 jaja para imagonar algo necesitas cerrar los ojos xdd
Alto problema tenes vr0
It's easy if we have to memorize words..how to learn tons of books....do we have so much time to make stories?
Yahu Yahu you then need to understand it to remember it.
Hope you try it.
Yahu Yahu thats exactly what i was thinking
This can be really helpful specially for chemistry if you have to learn the periodic table or, if you have to memorize concepts, you can create a story with the name of those concepts. But when it's long paragraph, the best way is to read as many times as you need to understand it and try to explain with your own words!
you memorize the key concepts per paragraph. This memorization method was popularize by Harry Lorayne.
"I do not remember the books I read. But they made me."
This is what Tedx talks are supposed to be! Fantastic!
I successfully memorized the last 10 presidents name.. And I am an Indian. Awesome
Syed Sym .nice thing.
Likewise. I felt betrayed as well.
I guess an Indian would ve better concerned in remembering the past Indian presidents/PM though
L
@thisisobdurate lit 😂
oriana si no salvo el parcial del sábado es culpa tuya sabelo
como te fue ahre
InLoveWithBTS uwu me saque -1 JAJAJAJAJAJ :)
Lpm yo tengo en miércoles ORIANA LPM
🤔🤔🤔🤔
My memory has tripled... 0*3= 0. 🗿
sanel hodzic Man... you are a Genius. ... 😂😂😂
You are awesome dude. Hahaha
Dude you made my day
This deserves more likes
red rose Awesome answer
Another wonderful trip down memory lane. I'd forgotten how many times I'd seen this one, but it's a classic none the less. Keep up the good work Tedx Haarlam, I think you are going to do big thing ❤
I never realised my mom actually did this to help me. I have ADD and had a hard time focussing on learning words/terms, for example french words. I would have a hard time focussing because with ADD you get easily distracted from just repeating words. So when I asked my mom for help she would do the words and whenever I didnt remember one of the words, she would relate it to something or make a joke about it. This made me remember those words even easier then the words I could remember. I dont know if she did this on purpose, but this helped me so much and this just hit me as im watching this video.
25years back, my brother memorized his high school exams through 1st letter short-coding or this kind of picturization-story building / mind imaging
I followed this technique too to score as topper
Time plays a role to showcase the latter people take credit of this ancient technique😉
Harry Lorayne’s memory techniques are amazing. Thanks for sharing them here.
For the first experiment, i made a phrase with all the words and only missed 2. My sentence was:
The *bearded* *object* had a *jacket* with a *secret edge* with *nothing* but a *date* with a *band* but got *punched* with *gas*
Same!Mine was The man with the beard holding an object and wearing a jacket told me a secret about when he jumped of the edge into nothing where he say his date and a band. He punched them and then reafulled his cars gas.
There was a man with a beard wearing a jacket with an object in it. He was holding onto a secret that had him on edge. He felt like he had nothing left to live for because he had yet another bad date, he got kicked out of his band for punching someone, and then he ran out of gas. It was a bad day.
this makes it harder for me to remember lol. I managed to memorize all of them except 8 and 9 ones by repeating the list.
i just doubled up the words: my beard is an object, my jacket has a secret (inside), at the edge there was nothing, i dated the whole band, and i punched the air (gas).
I just said my brain, BOJSE NDB PG😂😂😂 still remembered it
I've applied this technique a few weeks ago, and I've to admit guys, it really worked well!
LYK counterintuitively, i never expected that this would help me with my learning languages routine!
It's a gain or share experience place, not a joke or a meme thing here!
Gain knowledge or leave(with out commenting anything)!
I think this is the 1st lecture where i haven't fallen asleep
Forget memorisation. This young man is a damn good speaker and motivator.
Here's an irony. I'm a med student and tomorrow I have got an exam and out of nowhere this video is in my suggestion list. And here I'm in a dilemma whether I should keep on studying or spend my crucial 17 minutes to memorize stuffs more effectively.
do a quick read-over & apply what you can. Good luck!
Good luck tomorrow. What are you doing watching UA-cam if you have an exam tomorrow, shouldn't you be studying?
Hey did u pass?
@@shortsweetness876 haha it's been a year now
The reason why memorization isn’t needed, is because nowadays tests are about the process. solving problems, versus memorizing definitions. Finding connections and using inferences rather than memorizing definitions.
say no more. Just takin a pre-med course. Just sharin
Yea but u still need to memorize all the basic concepts and then understand them
He speaks English with excellent pronunciation and enunciation.
he just made the most creative story of all time
The trick to increasing memory is something I taught myself after a subarachnoid brain hemorrhage. The trick: remember like women do automatically, Associate moments with emotion as soon as possible
I had a SAH in June 2021. You're exactly right...people communicate in pictures, sounds and feelings. Don't ever forget that!!! xoxo
I’ve had two tbis that are moderate. Can you give me an example please
In 2009 my memory became alziamerr type who brother grief and lost
Good idea. I think Ted is really a good platform for me to see many excellent people's speeches. They often teach some very practical skills or introduce new things. Thank you for your video and sharing.
I live in Karachi Pakistan and I like your comment if you don't mind
I learnt a list of 100 random words using this technique and I was able to recite them forwards or backwards or starting from anywhere I the middle going either direction. It was a fascinating process.
Trying this in med school : sounds good, doesn’t work
Lol😂😂... yuup.
Exactly
Lol...... this is so f**kg hilarious
Hi
Hi Daenerys how are you doing hope you're having a pretty good day.
triple 0 is still 0
(great talk, really enjoyed it!)
r mia did
r mia ii
hahaha don't be too negative.
tripling 9 is 27, do I have to make up 17 words?
r mia : nobody is zero, that would be alzheimer, duh
Once they learn how to install a memory chip in our brains it’s all over for everyone
Yeah..you are right✌️
Oh myyyy! Elon musk Eurolink
I for one can't wait
I’m sorry I rather not, it is not always a good memory 🤣🤣🤣
@@Bambammbi you meant it's like human memory?
Give this man a medal, he changed my life!
Did it work for you?
@@wandayoung5904 yes it did. I get compliments about my memory so much more now. I thought I had no memory.
@@thegratitudeattitude67 Really? I. Gonna give it a try then. Thanks Sis!
Omg I was closing my eyes for the second exercise and (mind you I'm using earphones) I'm listening to a soft calming voice and out of nowhere I get a frieght because an ad pops comes on... I swear they did it on purpose 🤣🤣🤣🤣
1st of all great speech 👏👏👏👏
2nd iam aware of this great method of memorizing since school days but the prob is i couldnot really apply it on memorizing science like biology and chemistry, or pharmacology as we have memorize alot of dry names with side effects and indications..