I've been doing this since chatgpt came out. Its a massive help when learning programming concepts. I can ask about weird niche edge cases and it answers them like a professional tutor. ChatGPT is like a free private tutor for anything you could ever want. Just need to prompt smart.
@@joel9909 Following the methods outlined in Ken's video is a great start. To add to Ken's point about understanding ChatGPT's potential and limitations: 1. Provide GPT with concise, relevant information specific to your query. 2. Do not assume that GPT knows your context or background knowledge. 3. Always be explicit in your instructions, even if you've mentioned something before. By adhering to these guidelines, you'll clarify your own understanding of the task at hand and enable GPT to generate more accurate code or explanations for you. Over time, as you observe any inconsistencies in GPT's output and work through them, your debugging and comprehension skills will naturally improve.
I absolutely love this. I'm going for a CS degree and have ZERO coding experience.I asked ChatGPT to just *write a program that does a thing* and by going step by step I have a complete and detailed of understanding and then I CAN ASK IT TO ELABORATE ON THOSE THINGS ITS SO GOOD
@@Pseudo___ Yeah. I have yet to encounter any hallucinations when I generate code with the Advanced Data Analysis (formerly known as Code Interpreter). But it might be because I’m generating pretty basic code
@@Chaddeusthundercock Have you tried writing a paper with citations? It literally makes up references. But now that browsing is back, I wanna try it again and see if it's still gonna make stuff up.
Honestly it still does fail at answering some heavily theoretical questions. But it solves the greater majority of them, leaving only a few to take to the profs.
I once asked ChatGPT if it's fed up with my stupid questions. It said it wasn't. It even promised to never be. What a relief. Try that with a teacher 😅
After I started studying with ChatGPT my level of understanding has gotten so much deeper. I can ask limitless questions with it being to able answer all. I can learn just the way I want. Only problem with it is that some of the information it has given me has not been factual so now a lot of my time is also fact checking it's answers.
@@theamazingdude0075 Not always. When I use Chat, I don't use mindless ask it for answers without trying to understand what its told me - think of it as a tutor that you can ask unlimited questions until you fully understand the concept in question.
@@theamazingdude0075what's the difference than just researching it on the internet in the first place then? it's just the same. it would be perfect if chat gpt do get its fact 100% correct.
Prompts: 1. FLOWCHART: 'Create a flowchart to explain [TOPIC].' 2. MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTIONS: 'You are a a college professor in [TOPIC]. Create 10 multiple choice questions based on the topic of [TOPIC]. There should be 1 correct answer and 3 incorrect answers.' 3.SHORT ANSWER QUESTIONS: 'You are a college professor in [TOPIC]. Create 5 short answer questions based on the topic of [TOPIC]. Allow me to answer one question at a time before providing me another question. For each question I answer, please advise if I am correct or incorrect and provide an explanation accordingly. Grade my answer in percentages.' 4. SUMMARISING UA-cam VIDEO: 'Please summarize this UA-cam video into key dot point: [INSERT UA-cam TRANSCRIPT].' 5. LAYMAN'S TERMS: 'Explain in Layman's terms: [INSERT QUESTION].'
using chat gpt in studying medicine. asking it to explain tough concepts and talking to it about things i didn't understand. and getting examples of symptoms and cases. it is a blessing to the medical community. although it might replace the doctors in couple of years. but hey, if it replaces us and saves more people, we are down
This is why I have always studied creating synthesised flowcharts to look at whenever I feel unsure about the information. When I found out GPT could completely cover the making of the chart academic life got so much easier
The short answer questions is similar to how I've been using chatGPT as a tool for studying programming stuff, and it's been invaluable. This vid gave me some new ideas though that will help me make even better use of its capabilities, much appreciated! The youtube transcription idea is brilliant- plenty of vids I'm sure have great information in them that I just don't care to take an hour to consume in its entirety. The visual tip at the beginning is great too- I accidentally had gpt make a comparison table not realizing it could present information differently than just pure text, and I'll be experimenting a bunch with the ways it's able to display info. I've gotten way too many numbered lists in straight up text that are just a huge pain to read for me but asking for the same info in table form makes it unbelievably easier for me to quickly interpret/comprehend. Take a like and a sub!!
Long term your ability to get to conclusions yourself will dampen if you rely on super easy explanations too much. Sure, you'll understand all the things you're talking about with ChatGPT, but everything has a downside.
@@graydhd8688 Coming to your own conclusions through hard and prolonged thinking trains your brain. ChatGPT is a shortcut that makes it easier for you to understand it. It being easy isn't necessarily better though.
I don't think it's mutually exclusive. I suppose I could see that being a potential pitfall. Personally, I don't use chatGPT as primary learning resource anyways. I spend a lot of time without trying to learn/understand various things (mostly programming related as I'm vying for a career change), but it's been really great for helping me distinguish between the aspects of something I do as well as do not understand properly. For example, when I am using it one of my favorite types of prompts is to explain in as great of detail as possible something I have spent a lot of time studying but know there is still a few gaps in my overall understanding. And ask if my understanding is accurate or missing an important aspect. And from there I'll tend to have enough to work with to piece together all the pieces floating around in my head. Actually I just had a thought about AI art. Most people who hype it up are kinda just artistically lazy, and that's in part a personality thing I think? Cuz I can imagine legitimate ways of it being used as a tool in a manner that isn't creatively hollow. I bring this up as a parallel to what you said and think I get what you are trying to say a bit better now after thinking about it. I definitely can imagine many using ChatGPT in ways that feel rewarding but are intellectually lazy. I think taking anything it says at face value is intellectually lazy honestly. Just as it's artistically lazy to type up a prompt in midjourney, take the first result you like, and call yourself an artist. I think avoiding this outcome absolutely takes discipline, one I think I naturally have simply out of innate curiosity for having deep understanding of what makes a thing tick. I think I take that for granted though to be honest. At any rate, I honestly appreciate you sharing your concerns as it left me with some food for thought and I'll definitely keep an eye open to avoid complacency. This response generated by ChatGPT. (Totally kidding lol, I know for certain ChatGPT couldn't hold or keep track of all the sporadic weird internal connections my own brain has going on!) @@GodVanisher
I think what's also worth to mention is, that you can ask Chat GPT for credible sources for the answers it gives to you. That's quite helpful if you write papers or university assignment and need to add citations. However, it doesn't replace the work to go through the material by yourself though, but it really speeds up the time to search for sources which contain the piece of information you need. Chat GPT can't provide ISBNs or DOIs though. For example: What is a credible source to cite your explanation of the pomodoro technique? What is a good written source to reference the explanation of the pomodoro technique?
i almost failed a project as i experimented and 46% of sources were deceptively legit looking. complete hallucinations in the end. but entering paper titles onto scholar is a easy way to sort
i almost failed a project as i experimented and 46% of sources were deceptively legit looking. complete hallucinations in the end. but entering paper titles onto scholar is a easy way to sort
this is the true use for chatgpt. all these people are like "oh but people will use chat gpt to cheat oh they will just ask it for answers". yea your probobly right. but they wont learn anything in the end. this is the ultimate learning tool. we just need to learn how to best use it to its full capabilities
the problem with this though is the fact that sometimes chatgpt is wrong and has no idea what its talking about, and if you question it, it will question itself on the right answer as well.
I've got a couple additional more: - Mention your skill/knowledge level. Ask it to consider it when teaching, explaining, quizzing, etc. something - Ask it to provide a list of assumptions that you or the AI model made for any example being discussed. If you were the one the provided the example, the AI may give you more insights that you may not even be aware of OR if you were given the example, you'll know what was assumed (cause more often than not the AI model won't explicitly say it which may get you a bit lost).
Honestly, I tought this chanel had way many more suscribers cause of the quality, dude keep it up your soo underrated, the only thing I would say is that the audio quality doesn't feel 100% good, but still 85%, which is good enough. Thanks for the video!!
Woah, this is really useful! I was always captivated by ChatGPT and AI in general, but this takes it to a whole another level, haha. Thank you for the tips, the prompts will come in handy
Works only on basic levels. If you go to deep into a profession, ChatGPT WILL teach you wrong things. And the best part about it: You most likely won't notice it until its too late.
Your videos are so helpful- more so as an accelerated student in a stressful yr 12 exam period. These short bite sized videos of yours are diamonds in a landscape of videos that fish for views/watchtime. Thank you!!
for anyone having trouble making flowcharts from gpt, ask it to make a "text-based flowchart" instead of only a "flowchart" for example: instead of saying "gpt, can you make me a flowchart based on [TOPIC]?", say "gpt, can you make me a text-based flowchart on [TOPIC]?"
So how do you deal with hallucinations? I had used this method for a test but only after I had realized ChatGPT hallucinated a concept and flipped the answers! It made a convincing “explanation” but in the end it was wrong. And I had studied and learned wrong information….. I don’t know how you deal with this but in my experience I have to find a “correct” test or mc and ask it to make questions like this or change it up a bit but I need something to have it references as otherwise it makes things up. Nkw this is great but by the time I set all this up and use it, I often feel it would be much simpler to just use google and practice a mc test in my own
It does well with handling input info but if letting it "think" for itself it's important to ask for sources so that you can verify. Sometimes it uses bad/unreliable sources though.
Hi Ken, thanks for the great effort. How can we have the previous state and trained model while having a new chat? Do you use My GPTs (as for Nov 2024).
I have used every topic covered in this video to effectively study medicine this year. Also, using it to create you flashcards and using the speech function in chat gpt pro can be effective in practising patient interactions or history taking (i assume this can apply to other topics as well).
Obviously, you have to limit your expectations of its knowledge base, so either feed it the knowledge yourself, i.e. from your notes. Or get it to use the web browse feature to find the latest up-to-date info. For MCQ or SBA style questions, give it examples and a template for writing the questions as sometimes, when you get 100's of questions in it can start writing them in a completely different style.
Problem with ChatGPT is when you trust it too much. The more in-depth and specific questions you are asking. For example: it can describe me what is Re, but it doesnt know what R0.2 is. It doesnt know standards for my country, it have problems with understanding more in-depth informations about certian metallic structures or some material properties. I give examples from material engineering field because that's my field, but I can cleary see many mistakes in GPT knowledge here
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation: 00:00 🚀 *Efficient Study Introduction* - Traditional study inefficiencies: searching, fact-checking, understanding concepts, memorization. - ChatGPT significantly reduces study time. - Overview of the video's purpose and benefits. 00:27 🧠 *Visual Learning with Flowcharts* - Creating flowcharts to explain concepts visually. - Brain processes visual information 60,000 times faster. - ChatGPT simplifies studying by manipulating information presentation. 00:56 📚 *Effective Exam Preparation* - ChatGPT quizzes for exam preparation. - Quizzing enhances information recall. - Creating multiple-choice questions for self-testing. 01:38 🧠 *Challenging Self with Short Answer Questions* - Adapting quiz prompt for short answer questions. - ChatGPT analyzes, confirms correctness, and provides detailed explanations. - Grading percentage and feedback for improvement. 02:06 📝 *Summarizing UA-cam Videos* - Summarizing UA-cam videos using ChatGPT. - Converting video transcripts into digestible summaries. - Additional tip on converting summaries into flowcharts. 02:49 🔄 *Facilitating Understanding with Analogies* - ChatGPT provides analogies for better understanding. - No limitations on questions, encouraging thorough understanding. - Utilizing ChatGPT until concepts are crystal clear. 03:02 👋 *Conclusion and Call to Action* - Recap of the five study prompts. - Encouragement to like, subscribe, and comment if helpful. - Closing remarks and anticipation for the next video. Made with HARPA AI
I've used it a lot like this and it's great. The downside is it can often be wrong so take it with a grain of salt - at least, for maths problems, it would provide the logical feedback, and proceed to solve a problem a gave it but the solution was incongruent with its correct logic and formulae. Somehow it often just makes errors when doing multivar-calculus...
since it isn't a calculator and more of a natural language processing AI , it makes sense and it seems to be really good at explaining concepts. edit: text -> natural-language
as an acoustic engineering student - i can confirm it does not always work with calculus and algebra, and it doesn’t work with signal processing/signal theory, electrical and analog systems practical tasks, most ways of „a bit more than advanced” programming etc. etc.
for my uni work, when it comes to technical questions, in the medical field, where knowledge is getting updated, and changed every single year, and theres still a lot of unknowns, chatgpt has more often than not been unable to produce satisfactory answers, or give enough detail, or simply often gives confidently wrong answers.
Рік тому+2
I subbed because we need to emcourage no fluff videos
1stly, Chatgpt isn't syllabus specific. 2ndly, it will always gives replies to your questions. But that doesnt mean said replies are correct answers (as it lies) or answers that are aligned with syllabus specific exam mark schemes (that examiners use to allocate marks).
When i give ChatGPT the exact same question that is asked as prompt 1, it gives me the following response: DALL·E 3 Error creating images I'm unable to generate a flowchart that explains the process of how caffeine increases heart rate due to content policy. If there's another type of image you would like that aligns with the guidelines, please let me know and I would be glad to assist you. Did they patch it or am i just doing something wrong?
Eventually you hit a ceiling with what chatGPT understands. At least, that has been the case for me with high level engineering classes. It would be nice for there to be a quick way to upload large amounts of data, like a textbook pdf and have it learn from there.
I agree, one of the limits of current ChatGPT is limited data, although you could break it down into smaller chunks of data, it is more time intensive and not as fluid
I use chatdoc. I can upload up to 30 pdfs into a collection of which i can have multiple. Its not free but 10 bucks a months saves me so much time especually when work throws a big project at me last minute.
whaaaaattttttaaaaa hellllllllll I didn't though of chat gpt this effectively thankyou so much for providing these extremely useful method and ideas instant subscribe
@@knsroom Yes, I'm currently looking for an editor for the channel, and I was really impressed with your work! Is there a way for me to contact you? Thanks!
Hi @igorstudart, I used to play around with Adobe Premiere Pro. For this video, I spent a lot of time on UA-cam tutorials and just messing around with DaVinci Resolve!
If you are studying math ,physics or related things it is nearly useless cause most of the things it says are dumb and incorrect. If they get through this problem it could be a very good resource
ChatGPT is not a source, it's language model made to look like it's actually smart. It gives inaccurate information constantly and provides nonsensical sources. It is also very easy to manipulate. Use it to generate text based on your notes that you have taken from REAL sources.
I wrote my Extended Essay in the Internation Bachelorette program on the usage of technology in learning and to summarise hours of work. Not using chatGPT puts you at an disadvantage.
When it comes to more advanced concepts such as in upper level engeneering classes, you will not be able to get 'complex' enough problems to create a good study guide/ practice problems
1. Create flowchart for better understanding 2. Create multiple choice question, providing explanation to ur answer 3. Ask u question related to the topic 4. Summarize youtube video
Biggest problem with ChatGPT is when you try to go into basically anything that's deeper than a mud pool it just starts talking out of its ass. This can be extremely harmful to your learning process if you don't realise it, so always check it even if it sounds like it knows what it's talking about, remember it doesn't conceptually understand anything. You have to utilise it where it's powerful, which is things like summarising a big text or rewriting your own text.
Very good video, I've been using chatgpt since it came out for studying, but I never truly stood still and thought about what I could do more with it. Thanks!
I think this strategy is very dangerous because gpt, in my experience, always gives me wrong answers (like lots of nice words on the topic, but not necessarily the right ones). which will make it feel like you are learning, but you are actually learning the wrong ones
As a science teacher and AI trainer, this topic falls into my domain of expertise. I don't find the multiple choice questions generated by ChatGPT particularly useful. Main reason, the distactors are not challenging or relevant. In designing assessments, distactors (the wrong choices) must be chosen carefully to discriminate between those who fully understand a concept and those who don't. In other words, they must be somewhat adjacent to answer while not being the correct/best answer. Why might AI be poor at this? AI can be lazy especially if it is trained to be direct and efficient. To get a better more thoughful output requires more steps and prompt engineering. An LLM like ChaptGPT may not fully "internally monologue" its response. To properly contruct effective distractors to a multiple choice question is itself quite a challenging task. It may shortcut the process by simply doing randomization rather than perform in an depth analysis of the quality of each distractor. Meaning, the AI may see certain tasks as simpler than it really it is because requires training in that domain. It's not likely to receive that training. Most people won't flag an AI generated MC question unless there is a clear factual error.
Could you please tell me How can I use this Technique to Study Physics , Chemistry , Mathematics for JEE exam {2nd Toughest exam in world }. I don't think this technique can be applicable for any of the given subject.
@@navyblueskiess Yes It gives wrong answers not sometime but frequently in questions involving mathematical solving like once I was trying to verify my answer and asked chatgpt it calculated a simple inequation wrong
I really wish ChatGPT was perfect in these situations because even with the extensive data set of OpenAI and ChatGPT, it will still hallucinate which prompts us to fact check, and essentially do what we originally planned, studying but without ChatGPT. This is most prominent with me doing mathematics, I almost don't rely on ChatGPT to solve complex equations and problems for me (besides the basic ones) because there's there's always something that ChatGPT gets wrong in it and it can greatly affect the outcome of the answer. It's a 50/50 however, but I still wouldn't rely on it with mathematics.
I probably highly underestimate what you mean by "complex equations", but I have found ChatGPT to be extremely good at helping with studying for math in school. I was working on review problems for an Alg2/Trig test and wasn't really understanding them. So I copied down the problems into ChatGPT and asked it to walk me through the steps of each problem without giving me the answers outright. That got me through the review assignment but I still wanted to study more, so I asked it to give me a few new problems based on what I had already shown it before and then correct me when I had solved each problem. Not only did it successfully generate 10 unique problems that perfectly matched everything I had been learning in class, but it also made absolutely no errors in the math and it helped me understand the subject way better than anyone else had before. I guess it's important to note that ChatGPT will probably work much better if you have it go through things with you and you explain your processes - it's not a calculator, and it's not even really like a robot in the way you need to interact with it, it's more like talking to a person. I don't remember the point of this comment. ChatGPT can help with math if used correctly? I think the people that say ChatGPT makes mistakes are probably people who don't know how to use it appropriately.
Have you tried ChatGPT plus? Especially for coding it makes a huge difference in performance. What I haven’t tried yet, but I heard that there is a wolfram alpha ChatGPT plugin, which should perform better than the regular ChatGPT
That's really good, it really helps use chat gpt more efficiently. and get you more information, quicker. what do you think about the times it provides false information, though ?
I've been doing this since chatgpt came out. Its a massive help when learning programming concepts. I can ask about weird niche edge cases and it answers them like a professional tutor. ChatGPT is like a free private tutor for anything you could ever want. Just need to prompt smart.
It’s honestly such a great tool if you know its potential and limitations
can you give any advice on how to prompt correctly to understand programming better
@@joel9909 Following the methods outlined in Ken's video is a great start.
To add to Ken's point about understanding ChatGPT's potential and limitations:
1. Provide GPT with concise, relevant information specific to your query.
2. Do not assume that GPT knows your context or background knowledge.
3. Always be explicit in your instructions, even if you've mentioned something before.
By adhering to these guidelines, you'll clarify your own understanding of the task at hand and enable GPT to generate more accurate code or explanations for you. Over time, as you observe any inconsistencies in GPT's output and work through them, your debugging and comprehension skills will naturally improve.
I absolutely love this. I'm going for a CS degree and have ZERO coding experience.I asked ChatGPT to just *write a program that does a thing* and by going step by step I have a complete and detailed of understanding and then I CAN ASK IT TO ELABORATE ON THOSE THINGS ITS SO GOOD
Exactly!
Make sure to fact check the answers. Hallucinations can still happen
Very true!
True but.. I’ve found programming hallucinations minimal, and when they are there .. your pgrm throws errors; so immediate feedback
@@Pseudo___ Yeah. I have yet to encounter any hallucinations when I generate code with the Advanced Data Analysis (formerly known as Code Interpreter). But it might be because I’m generating pretty basic code
I’ve rarely had hallucinations and it’s all cyber/computer sci content
GPT 4 is great
@@Chaddeusthundercock Have you tried writing a paper with citations? It literally makes up references. But now that browsing is back, I wanna try it again and see if it's still gonna make stuff up.
Literally the only reason I enjoy ChatGPT. It's better than asking most teachers
This is legitimately more helpful than anything it's done yet
And it's nicer to talk to than most of people XD
But sometimes it gives outdated answers and tell your about revoked laws
it makes me question how the future of education will be like...
like i literally use chatgpt for everything (as study tool, assignment tool)
Honestly it still does fail at answering some heavily theoretical questions. But it solves the greater majority of them, leaving only a few to take to the profs.
I once asked ChatGPT if it's fed up with my stupid questions. It said it wasn't. It even promised to never be. What a relief.
Try that with a teacher 😅
After I started studying with ChatGPT my level of understanding has gotten so much deeper. I can ask limitless questions with it being to able answer all. I can learn just the way I want. Only problem with it is that some of the information it has given me has not been factual so now a lot of my time is also fact checking it's answers.
True but on the other hand, you’ll remember it better because you put effort into finding the right answer.
@@theamazingdude0075 Not always. When I use Chat, I don't use mindless ask it for answers without trying to understand what its told me - think of it as a tutor that you can ask unlimited questions until you fully understand the concept in question.
@@theamazingdude0075what's the difference than just researching it on the internet in the first place then? it's just the same. it would be perfect if chat gpt do get its fact 100% correct.
@@theamazingdude0075that’s the beauty of it
Prompts:
1. FLOWCHART: 'Create a flowchart to explain [TOPIC].'
2. MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTIONS: 'You are a a college professor in [TOPIC]. Create 10 multiple choice questions based on the topic of [TOPIC]. There should be 1 correct answer and 3 incorrect answers.'
3.SHORT ANSWER QUESTIONS: 'You are a college professor in [TOPIC]. Create 5 short answer questions based on the topic of [TOPIC]. Allow me to answer one question at a time before providing me another question. For each question I answer, please advise if I am correct or incorrect and provide an explanation accordingly. Grade my answer in percentages.'
4. SUMMARISING UA-cam VIDEO: 'Please summarize this UA-cam video into key dot point: [INSERT UA-cam TRANSCRIPT].'
5. LAYMAN'S TERMS: 'Explain in Layman's terms: [INSERT QUESTION].'
Thanks dear 🙏
pin this please
using chat gpt in studying medicine. asking it to explain tough concepts and talking to it about things i didn't understand. and getting examples of symptoms and cases. it is a blessing to the medical community. although it might replace the doctors in couple of years. but hey, if it replaces us and saves more people, we are down
It definitely won't replace doctors, at least not in this century.
This is why I have always studied creating synthesised flowcharts to look at whenever I feel unsure about the information. When I found out GPT could completely cover the making of the chart academic life got so much easier
The short answer questions is similar to how I've been using chatGPT as a tool for studying programming stuff, and it's been invaluable. This vid gave me some new ideas though that will help me make even better use of its capabilities, much appreciated! The youtube transcription idea is brilliant- plenty of vids I'm sure have great information in them that I just don't care to take an hour to consume in its entirety. The visual tip at the beginning is great too- I accidentally had gpt make a comparison table not realizing it could present information differently than just pure text, and I'll be experimenting a bunch with the ways it's able to display info. I've gotten way too many numbered lists in straight up text that are just a huge pain to read for me but asking for the same info in table form makes it unbelievably easier for me to quickly interpret/comprehend. Take a like and a sub!!
Thank you for the amazing feedback and support, it’s amazing to know you found it helpful!
Long term your ability to get to conclusions yourself will dampen if you rely on super easy explanations too much. Sure, you'll understand all the things you're talking about with ChatGPT, but everything has a downside.
@@GodVanisher possibly? Depends on how one uses it I'd imagine. Not really sure what you're trying to say overall though
@@graydhd8688 Coming to your own conclusions through hard and prolonged thinking trains your brain. ChatGPT is a shortcut that makes it easier for you to understand it. It being easy isn't necessarily better though.
I don't think it's mutually exclusive. I suppose I could see that being a potential pitfall. Personally, I don't use chatGPT as primary learning resource anyways. I spend a lot of time without trying to learn/understand various things (mostly programming related as I'm vying for a career change), but it's been really great for helping me distinguish between the aspects of something I do as well as do not understand properly. For example, when I am using it one of my favorite types of prompts is to explain in as great of detail as possible something I have spent a lot of time studying but know there is still a few gaps in my overall understanding. And ask if my understanding is accurate or missing an important aspect. And from there I'll tend to have enough to work with to piece together all the pieces floating around in my head.
Actually I just had a thought about AI art. Most people who hype it up are kinda just artistically lazy, and that's in part a personality thing I think? Cuz I can imagine legitimate ways of it being used as a tool in a manner that isn't creatively hollow. I bring this up as a parallel to what you said and think I get what you are trying to say a bit better now after thinking about it. I definitely can imagine many using ChatGPT in ways that feel rewarding but are intellectually lazy. I think taking anything it says at face value is intellectually lazy honestly. Just as it's artistically lazy to type up a prompt in midjourney, take the first result you like, and call yourself an artist. I think avoiding this outcome absolutely takes discipline, one I think I naturally have simply out of innate curiosity for having deep understanding of what makes a thing tick. I think I take that for granted though to be honest. At any rate, I honestly appreciate you sharing your concerns as it left me with some food for thought and I'll definitely keep an eye open to avoid complacency.
This response generated by ChatGPT.
(Totally kidding lol, I know for certain ChatGPT couldn't hold or keep track of all the sporadic weird internal connections my own brain has going on!)
@@GodVanisher
I think what's also worth to mention is, that you can ask Chat GPT for credible sources for the answers it gives to you. That's quite helpful if you write papers or university assignment and need to add citations. However, it doesn't replace the work to go through the material by yourself though, but it really speeds up the time to search for sources which contain the piece of information you need. Chat GPT can't provide ISBNs or DOIs though.
For example:
What is a credible source to cite your explanation of the pomodoro technique?
What is a good written source to reference the explanation of the pomodoro technique?
i almost failed a project as i experimented and 46% of sources were deceptively legit looking. complete hallucinations in the end. but entering paper titles onto scholar is a easy way to sort
i almost failed a project as i experimented and 46% of sources were deceptively legit looking. complete hallucinations in the end. but entering paper titles onto scholar is a easy way to sort
Don't do that. They are most likely fake
775 subscribers and you are delivering this quality of videos, damn man you are really putting efforts in providing quality content.
You’re a gem, thank you! ☺️
And already nearing 1k but yeah, same thinking here. Are you doing all this editing yourself? Or has AI just gotten this good already?
I definitely do all the editing myself! It’s a bit of a learning process 😁
@@knsroom Your gonna blow up soon i know it. The quality is too good for this low subscribers. Thanks for the help
this is the true use for chatgpt. all these people are like "oh but people will use chat gpt to cheat oh they will just ask it for answers". yea your probobly right. but they wont learn anything in the end. this is the ultimate learning tool. we just need to learn how to best use it to its full capabilities
the problem with this though is the fact that sometimes chatgpt is wrong and has no idea what its talking about, and if you question it, it will question itself on the right answer as well.
I feel like Ken just shot him self on the foot by telling us how to resume a UA-cam video, and that's why I really appreciate the honesty
oh yeah it helps with almost everything, especially it helps a lot with programming.
But maths, sadly it goes a little off sometimes with that one.
I've got a couple additional more:
- Mention your skill/knowledge level. Ask it to consider it when teaching, explaining, quizzing, etc. something
- Ask it to provide a list of assumptions that you or the AI model made for any example being discussed. If you were the one the provided the example, the AI may give you more insights that you may not even be aware of OR if you were given the example, you'll know what was assumed (cause more often than not the AI model won't explicitly say it which may get you a bit lost).
Got finals this week so glad i found this vid W
Honestly, I tought this chanel had way many more suscribers cause of the quality, dude keep it up your soo underrated, the only thing I would say is that the audio quality doesn't feel 100% good, but still 85%, which is good enough. Thanks for the video!!
Thank you so much, that’s such a big compliment! I’ll keep on working on the audio
@@knsroom And I’ll keep watching your vids!
Never knew this i only every used chatgpt to help me write essays, with this i think i can write my own now. Thanks Ken, and Thank you ChatGPT
Woah, this is really useful! I was always captivated by ChatGPT and AI in general, but this takes it to a whole another level, haha. Thank you for the tips, the prompts will come in handy
Works only on basic levels. If you go to deep into a profession, ChatGPT WILL teach you wrong things. And the best part about it: You most likely won't notice it until its too late.
Shhh, dont tell them that
cap
This is a GEM 💎 Ty bro!
I got to start using this for my exams, this is one of the best tool I’ve ever encountered🤩
Fun fact,the diagramm on the thumbnail shows that you learn more if you spend more time learning,what a breakthrough!
No, it doesn't. It says "learning speed" on the x-axis, but this doesn't necessarily mean, that there is time is on the y-axis.
Your videos are so helpful- more so as an accelerated student in a stressful yr 12 exam period. These short bite sized videos of yours are diamonds in a landscape of videos that fish for views/watchtime.
Thank you!!
I use the prompt ELI5 a lot. Explain Like I’m 5. Works just as good as layman’s terms.
You are the best, this is the video I am looking for, thank you for making this .
for anyone having trouble making flowcharts from gpt, ask it to make a "text-based flowchart" instead of only a "flowchart"
for example: instead of saying "gpt, can you make me a flowchart based on [TOPIC]?", say "gpt, can you make me a text-based flowchart on [TOPIC]?"
thanks buddy this was helpfull in so many levels
So how do you deal with hallucinations? I had used this method for a test but only after I had realized ChatGPT hallucinated a concept and flipped the answers! It made a convincing “explanation” but in the end it was wrong. And I had studied and learned wrong information….. I don’t know how you deal with this but in my experience I have to find a “correct” test or mc and ask it to make questions like this or change it up a bit but I need something to have it references as otherwise it makes things up. Nkw this is great but by the time I set all this up and use it, I often feel it would be much simpler to just use google and practice a mc test in my own
Even if it's not accurate, it will still give you an idea how think about the problem. I love AI for learning.
It does well with handling input info but if letting it "think" for itself it's important to ask for sources so that you can verify. Sometimes it uses bad/unreliable sources though.
This is solid advice .. active recall and efficiency for studies is a must! thanks
To the point and considerate with viewers time
Great prompts! Keep up the good work
Thank you!!
Hi Ken, thanks for the great effort. How can we have the previous state and trained model while having a new chat? Do you use My GPTs (as for Nov 2024).
I have used every topic covered in this video to effectively study medicine this year. Also, using it to create you flashcards and using the speech function in chat gpt pro can be effective in practising patient interactions or history taking (i assume this can apply to other topics as well).
Obviously, you have to limit your expectations of its knowledge base, so either feed it the knowledge yourself, i.e. from your notes. Or get it to use the web browse feature to find the latest up-to-date info. For MCQ or SBA style questions, give it examples and a template for writing the questions as sometimes, when you get 100's of questions in it can start writing them in a completely different style.
Problem with ChatGPT is when you trust it too much. The more in-depth and specific questions you are asking. For example: it can describe me what is Re, but it doesnt know what R0.2 is. It doesnt know standards for my country, it have problems with understanding more in-depth informations about certian metallic structures or some material properties. I give examples from material engineering field because that's my field, but I can cleary see many mistakes in GPT knowledge here
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
00:00 🚀 *Efficient Study Introduction*
- Traditional study inefficiencies: searching, fact-checking, understanding concepts, memorization.
- ChatGPT significantly reduces study time.
- Overview of the video's purpose and benefits.
00:27 🧠 *Visual Learning with Flowcharts*
- Creating flowcharts to explain concepts visually.
- Brain processes visual information 60,000 times faster.
- ChatGPT simplifies studying by manipulating information presentation.
00:56 📚 *Effective Exam Preparation*
- ChatGPT quizzes for exam preparation.
- Quizzing enhances information recall.
- Creating multiple-choice questions for self-testing.
01:38 🧠 *Challenging Self with Short Answer Questions*
- Adapting quiz prompt for short answer questions.
- ChatGPT analyzes, confirms correctness, and provides detailed explanations.
- Grading percentage and feedback for improvement.
02:06 📝 *Summarizing UA-cam Videos*
- Summarizing UA-cam videos using ChatGPT.
- Converting video transcripts into digestible summaries.
- Additional tip on converting summaries into flowcharts.
02:49 🔄 *Facilitating Understanding with Analogies*
- ChatGPT provides analogies for better understanding.
- No limitations on questions, encouraging thorough understanding.
- Utilizing ChatGPT until concepts are crystal clear.
03:02 👋 *Conclusion and Call to Action*
- Recap of the five study prompts.
- Encouragement to like, subscribe, and comment if helpful.
- Closing remarks and anticipation for the next video.
Made with HARPA AI
bro youre so helpful, i really want an effective and an active studying methods, thanksssss
very good video thanks
well, not all videos have transcripts btw
I've used it a lot like this and it's great. The downside is it can often be wrong so take it with a grain of salt - at least, for maths problems, it would provide the logical feedback, and proceed to solve a problem a gave it but the solution was incongruent with its correct logic and formulae. Somehow it often just makes errors when doing multivar-calculus...
since it isn't a calculator and more of a natural language processing AI , it makes sense and it seems to be really good at explaining concepts. edit: text -> natural-language
Asking it for simple examples is good too
as an acoustic engineering student - i can confirm it does not always work with calculus and algebra, and it doesn’t work with signal processing/signal theory, electrical and analog systems practical tasks, most ways of „a bit more than advanced” programming etc. etc.
Thanks for sharing these helpful study tips!
Any time!
for my uni work, when it comes to technical questions, in the medical field, where knowledge is getting updated, and changed every single year, and theres still a lot of unknowns, chatgpt has more often than not been unable to produce satisfactory answers, or give enough detail, or simply often gives confidently wrong answers.
I subbed because we need to emcourage no fluff videos
Thank you for the support!
1stly, Chatgpt isn't syllabus specific.
2ndly, it will always gives replies to your questions. But that doesnt mean said replies are correct answers (as it lies) or answers that are aligned with syllabus specific exam mark schemes (that examiners use to allocate marks).
When i give ChatGPT the exact same question that is asked as prompt 1, it gives me the following response: DALL·E 3
Error creating images
I'm unable to generate a flowchart that explains the process of how caffeine increases heart rate due to content policy. If there's another type of image you would like that aligns with the guidelines, please let me know and I would be glad to assist you.
Did they patch it or am i just doing something wrong?
we need more like this video content, bcuz so many users of ChatGPT, dont know the proper use of this App
Eventually you hit a ceiling with what chatGPT understands. At least, that has been the case for me with high level engineering classes. It would be nice for there to be a quick way to upload large amounts of data, like a textbook pdf and have it learn from there.
I agree, one of the limits of current ChatGPT is limited data, although you could break it down into smaller chunks of data, it is more time intensive and not as fluid
you can now train your own chatgpt with huge amounts of data (about 300 hundred pdf pages of data), try the new GPTs feature
is that part of gpt4?@@oscarmontescamberos1018
I use chatdoc. I can upload up to 30 pdfs into a collection of which i can have multiple. Its not free but 10 bucks a months saves me so much time especually when work throws a big project at me last minute.
I love it. Thanks for sharing this concise and helpful video.
Thanks for the informative video, I had no idea I could do that!
Thanks brother for the information!
Yes these are some useful prompts
thank you for this video!
flowchart, multiple choice, summarizing vids, laymans terms
Thanks to ChatGPT, I am certified on Python programming now. ✌️
whaaaaattttttaaaaa hellllllllll
I didn't though of chat gpt this effectively
thankyou so much for providing these extremely useful method and ideas
instant subscribe
Very impressive. Do you offer an editing service yourself?
Thank you so much! I don’t, but is this something you’re after?
@@knsroom Yes, I'm currently looking for an editor for the channel, and I was really impressed with your work! Is there a way for me to contact you? Thanks!
Hey yes, you can contact me @ knsroom@gmail.com
@@knsroom Just sent you an email. Thanks 👍
Very helpful thank you for this golden information
I've been asking Chat GPT to quiz me on Chemistry and I've actually had some good practice correcting Chat GPT on the answers provided.
this man deserves way more attention
Superb content! Keep it up!
THANKSSSSS
These animations on your video are great, man. Where did you learn that?
Adobe after effects
Hi @igorstudart, I used to play around with Adobe Premiere Pro. For this video, I spent a lot of time on UA-cam tutorials and just messing around with DaVinci Resolve!
If you are studying math ,physics or related things it is nearly useless cause most of the things it says are dumb and incorrect. If they get through this problem it could be a very good resource
Good tips!
Learning by asking questions
ChatGPT is not a source, it's language model made to look like it's actually smart. It gives inaccurate information constantly and provides nonsensical sources. It is also very easy to manipulate. Use it to generate text based on your notes that you have taken from REAL sources.
I wrote my Extended Essay in the Internation Bachelorette program on the usage of technology in learning and to summarise hours of work. Not using chatGPT puts you at an disadvantage.
Perfect video 10/10
very useful and informative video!! thank u ^^
Thank you, I hope it helped!
this is a game changer
That moment when chatgpt is not available in your country
When it comes to more advanced concepts such as in upper level engeneering classes, you will not be able to get 'complex' enough problems to create a good study guide/ practice problems
1. Create flowchart for better understanding
2. Create multiple choice question, providing explanation to ur answer
3. Ask u question related to the topic
4. Summarize youtube video
Very helpful vedio.
man i love ChatGPT
The thing about the transcripts is that unfortunately only a minority of UA-cam videos have them.
bless your soul my friend
Biggest problem with ChatGPT is when you try to go into basically anything that's deeper than a mud pool it just starts talking out of its ass. This can be extremely harmful to your learning process if you don't realise it, so always check it even if it sounds like it knows what it's talking about, remember it doesn't conceptually understand anything.
You have to utilise it where it's powerful, which is things like summarising a big text or rewriting your own text.
I love you, thanks
Very good video, I've been using chatgpt since it came out for studying, but I never truly stood still and thought about what I could do more with it. Thanks!
Thanks alot man
Glad it helped!
that's great!
I think this strategy is very dangerous because gpt, in my experience, always gives me wrong answers (like lots of nice words on the topic, but not necessarily the right ones). which will make it feel like you are learning, but you are actually learning the wrong ones
Used the paid version
great video
As a science teacher and AI trainer, this topic falls into my domain of expertise. I don't find the multiple choice questions generated by ChatGPT particularly useful. Main reason, the distactors are not challenging or relevant. In designing assessments, distactors (the wrong choices) must be chosen carefully to discriminate between those who fully understand a concept and those who don't. In other words, they must be somewhat adjacent to answer while not being the correct/best answer.
Why might AI be poor at this? AI can be lazy especially if it is trained to be direct and efficient. To get a better more thoughful output requires more steps and prompt engineering. An LLM like ChaptGPT may not fully "internally monologue" its response. To properly contruct effective distractors to a multiple choice question is itself quite a challenging task. It may shortcut the process by simply doing randomization rather than perform in an depth analysis of the quality of each distractor. Meaning, the AI may see certain tasks as simpler than it really it is because requires training in that domain. It's not likely to receive that training. Most people won't flag an AI generated MC question unless there is a clear factual error.
Helpful
Well done, some really good info here.
Thank you ☺️
Except math. I learned SO MANY things using GPT effectively EXCEPT MATH. It hallucinates the hell out of numbers and step by steps.
0:45 Nice animation
Gone check this
Could you please tell me
How can I use this Technique to Study Physics , Chemistry , Mathematics
for JEE exam {2nd Toughest exam in world }.
I don't think this technique can be applicable for any of the given subject.
Use it to explain certain topics but sometimes it gives wrong answers.
For eg - explain viscosity to a 12 year old, you can use this prompt.
@@navyblueskiess Yes It gives wrong answers not sometime but frequently in questions involving mathematical solving
like once I was trying to verify my answer and asked chatgpt it calculated a simple inequation wrong
I really wish ChatGPT was perfect in these situations because even with the extensive data set of OpenAI and ChatGPT, it will still hallucinate which prompts us to fact check, and essentially do what we originally planned, studying but without ChatGPT.
This is most prominent with me doing mathematics, I almost don't rely on ChatGPT to solve complex equations and problems for me (besides the basic ones) because there's there's always something that ChatGPT gets wrong in it and it can greatly affect the outcome of the answer. It's a 50/50 however, but I still wouldn't rely on it with mathematics.
I probably highly underestimate what you mean by "complex equations", but I have found ChatGPT to be extremely good at helping with studying for math in school.
I was working on review problems for an Alg2/Trig test and wasn't really understanding them. So I copied down the problems into ChatGPT and asked it to walk me through the steps of each problem without giving me the answers outright. That got me through the review assignment but I still wanted to study more, so I asked it to give me a few new problems based on what I had already shown it before and then correct me when I had solved each problem. Not only did it successfully generate 10 unique problems that perfectly matched everything I had been learning in class, but it also made absolutely no errors in the math and it helped me understand the subject way better than anyone else had before.
I guess it's important to note that ChatGPT will probably work much better if you have it go through things with you and you explain your processes - it's not a calculator, and it's not even really like a robot in the way you need to interact with it, it's more like talking to a person.
I don't remember the point of this comment. ChatGPT can help with math if used correctly? I think the people that say ChatGPT makes mistakes are probably people who don't know how to use it appropriately.
Have you tried ChatGPT plus? Especially for coding it makes a huge difference in performance. What I haven’t tried yet, but I heard that there is a wolfram alpha ChatGPT plugin, which should perform better than the regular ChatGPT
That's really good, it really helps use chat gpt more efficiently. and get you more information, quicker. what do you think about the times it provides false information, though ?
"bro, look this promt is so good. you just ask it stuff until you understand it lol"
Subbed!
Thank you so much for the support!
How do I use Chatgpt to learn coding, Python, C++, and Java
Question: How exactly did you make youtube show transcript? Mine has clip button instead of transcript, can i change it?