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- From: llarsen%peruvian.cs.utah.edu@cs.utah.edu (Loren Larsen)
- Subject: Re: Failing memory(?) / speed reading, advice sought
- Date: 18 Nov 92 12:13:01 MST
- Message-ID: <1992Nov18.121302.20596@hellgate.utah.edu>
- Organization: University of Utah CS Dept
- References: <7473@kielo.uta.fi>
- Distribution: inet
- Lines: 70
-
- In article <7473@kielo.uta.fi> f1sami@uta.fi (Samu Mielonen) writes:
- >I have a huge problem with my memory or the way I manage my things (haven't
- >necessarily figured it out yet) and I hope someone can help me out on this.
- >I find myself forgetting not only the everyday tasks need to be done, but I
- >also forget names, places, events and whole subjects.
- >
- > For example, somebody introduces me a person, whom I find instantly likeable
- >and with whom I get along (this should aid the process of remembering or am I
- >wrong?), but may forget his/her name the next day even after having made a
- >conscious attempt to remember it. This happens a lot to me and I also forget
- >about names of the places, tasks I really ought / want to accomplish and stuff
- >that I have read about casually or for an examination.
- >
- > I cannot / do not want to associate this all to the amount of
- >things to be remembered, although I am quite sure that as my interests have
- >grown the number of items to be remembered has also grown. Still, even if it's
- >a case of memory overload I do not want to give up without a fight. I have
- >tried some mnemonic techniques (namely Buzen, but also others), but either
- >they're of little help or I forget to use them! I think herein lies the
- >main problem; as I am a believer in mnemonics and I try to train my memory,
- >but even after trying to motivate myself I cannot use the techniques when
- >I should. I am now not only ought of memory (:-), but also out of ideas.
- >
- > Or could it be that I am learning how to remember, but do not know how
- >to recall correctly? If so, how can one train recall?
-
- Well I hope someone else comments on this, but I think the memory "systems"
- that Tony Buzan teaches are fairly useless. Most of them are oriented
- around learning long lists of things. Personally, I almost never need to
- remember lists. Who does? Maybe med students do I don't know. What
- is useful is the principles behind them. Exaggeration, synesthesia,
- uniqueness. If you haven't studied it yet, learn how to mindmap. It is
- the greatest thing. I've known about them for about three years, but
- until the last few weeks never really known how to apply them well. In
- short, mindmapping is a left/right brain integrated activity for outlining,
- note-taking, brainstorming, etc. It is much funner and you spend much more
- time listening and understanding rather than writing. What I didn't
- understand or believe about note taking is that your brain CAN remember
- everything. Mindmapping just allows you to key into your recall. It
- improves your creativity and is much more interested and fast to review.
- That is another good point. Always review the notes you have taken.
- Writing it down once just isn't enough to get everything out of your notes.
- Mindmapping will also increase your synesthesia because as you review your
- mindmap, you will see a key word or image that will trigger your memory and
- you will HAVE to go back and re-experience the thing you are reviewing
- rather than just re-reading/re-ingesting the material from a boring linear
- set of notes.
-
- > On another matter, there's been a lot of discussion on speed reading lately
- >here and many people have stated that different texts should be read at
- >different speeds. Fair enough, but can anyone state their minimum & maximum
- >reading rates for reference purposes and tell how does one achieve such
- >results (I am also interested in finding about horridly low rates, as they're
- >sometimes not only useful, but even necessary).
-
- The slowest I read is naturally when I'm reading detail technical/mathematical
- work. An example of this is something that happened last week when I was
- applying both Mindmapping and speed reading techniques together, something
- I haven't done in a long time. I was reading a book on computer graphics
- and it was quite detailed and was describing several in-depth algorithms.
- To read 25 pages it took 45 minutes, that includes taking notes with a mindmap.
- I don't know how many words that translates to, but I was excited, especially
- since I believe my recall is very high from that material. Reading quickly
- dramatically increases your recall I think, as long as you maintain
- concentration.
-
- >Cheers,
- > Samu Z. Mielonen
-
-
-