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Ladataan... Moonwalking With Einstein: The Art and Science of Remembering Everything (alkuperäinen julkaisuvuosi 2011; vuoden 2011 painos)Tekijä: Joshua Foer
TeostiedotKaiken muistamisen taito (tekijä: Joshua Foer) (2011)
![]() Top Five Books of 2013 (547) » 12 lisää Ei tämänhetkisiä Keskustelu-viestiketjuja tästä kirjasta. Foer became interested in people who participate in competitive memorization contests, and when those people told him that anyone can do it, he put that idea to the test and spent a year learning advanced memorization techniques and successfully competing in memorization tournaments. I read this because I was interested in learning some memorization techniques myself. The book does discuss some of the techniques in detail, but it also spends a lot of time talking about the people who participate in memory championships, the history of the competitions, and Foer's own experiences. That was all reasonably interesting, but wasn't the information I was really looking for. If you're interested in memorization techniques, I think Mary Carruther's Book of Memory is far more interesting. Awesome reading. It is not an how-to manual to be a mnemonist, it describe the path that Joshua did in order to become the US memory champion. It is a path full of insights, anecdotes and funny stories that help the reader understand the deep work behind a mnemonist. I appreciate digressions about "savantism", interviews and all the research details reported. Thanks Joshua. ei arvosteluja | lisää arvostelu
Kuuluu näihin sarjoihinVan der Leeuw-lezing (2011) Kuuluu näihin kustantajien sarjoihinImeline Teadus (1) Lyhennelty täällä:On vastaus tähän:Tähän on vastattu täällä:PalkinnotDistinctionsNotable Lists
Having achieved the seemingly unachievable-- becoming a U.S. Memory Champion-- Foer shows how anyone with enough training and determination can achieve mastery of their memory. Kirjastojen kuvailuja ei löytynyt. |
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We remember things in context. The more associative hooks something has the more embedded it gets into the network of things you already know and the more likely it is to be remembered. The brain is better at remembering if there are visual cues / images. Chunking can also assist (e.g. 0291852719 vs 029 185 2719).
Use spacial memory to remember things (i.e. memory palaces). An example:
1. Think of your family home, an area you are intimately familiar with.
2. Place the objects you want to remember at locations along a route in the home (start at driveway then front step etc).
2a Remember each object multi-sensory (location, sounds, smells). Deeply process image. Try and make it amusing (this makes it more vivid).
3. Retrace steps.
4. If you retrace steps again later in the day, in a week or will even further ingrain this into memory.
Remembering numbers can be done with the Major system created by Johann Winckelmann through replacing numbers with phonetic sounds that can then be constructed as a word freely interdispersed with vowels (i.e. 0 as S, 1 as T or D, 2 N, 3 M, 4 R, 5 L, 6 Sh or Ch, 7 K or G, 8 F or V, 9 P or B), therefore 32 could be man, 86 a fish, 7879 a coffee cup which you can then place in your memory palace.
A mindmap can be considered a type of memory place that helps you organise ideas into common areas.
I personally would have preferred a book that jumped straight into techniques to adopt as opposed to a book talking about the great memory of numerous people, memory championships and our physiology. Chapters 5 and 8 are where I found the most practical content.
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