This link has been bookmarked by 281 people . It was first bookmarked on 22 Apr 2008, by a77ila.
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Jakub BaresComputer enhanced learning
Living by strict rules and beign under computer controll-
human forgetting follows a pattern. We forget exponentially.
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calculate the moment of forgetting if he could discover the right algorithm.
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SuperMemo is the result of his research. It predicts the future state of a person's memory and schedules information reviews at the optimal time
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he would have us rely not merely on our traditional sources of self-knowledge — introspection, intuition, and conscious thought — but also on something new: predictions about ourselves encoded in machines.
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observe our behaviors, computers can run simulations, modeling different versions of our path through the world.
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computers will give us rules to live by.
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cue us to remember what we've read, help us track whom we've met, and remind us of our goals.
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increase our intellectual capacity and enhance our rational self-control.
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human forgetting follows a pattern. We forget exponentially. A graph of our likelihood of getting the correct answer on a quiz sweeps quickly downward over time and then levels off. This pattern has long been known to cognitive psychology, but it has been difficult to put to practical use. It's too complex for us to employ with our naked brains.
Twenty years ago, Wozniak realized that computers could easily calculate the moment of forgetting if he could discover the right algorithm. SuperMemo is the result of his research.
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for Wozniak, 46, helping people learn a foreign language fast is just the tiniest part of his goal. As we plan the days, weeks, even years of our lives, he would have us rely not merely on our traditional sources of self-knowledge — introspection, intuition, and conscious thought — but also on something new: predictions about ourselves encoded in machines.
Given the chance to observe our behaviors, computers can run simulations, modeling different versions of our path through the world. By tuning these models for top performance, computers will give us rules to live by. They will be able to tell us when to wake, sleep, learn, and exercise; they will cue us to remember what we've read, help us track whom we've met, and remind us of our goals. Computers, in Wozniak's scheme, will increase our intellectual capacity and enhance our rational self-control.
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Wozniak is a kind of algorithmic man. He's exploring what it's like to live in strict obedience to reason. On first encounter, he appears to be one of the happiest people I've ever met.
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26 Jun 10
Dante-Gabryell MonsonGiven the chance to observe our behaviors, computers can run simulations, modeling different versions of our path through the world. By tuning these models for top performance, computers will give us rules to live by. They will be able to tell us when to
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30 May 10
dolors reigPiotr Wozniak has a technique to turn people into geniuses, and a portion of the technique is in a software program called SuperMemo. Users around the world apply it to learning languages and gaining language fluency. SuperMemo is based on the insight tha
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David SladkeyPiotr Wozniak has a technique to turn people into geniuses, and a portion of the technique is in a software program called SuperMemo. Users around the world apply it to learning languages and gaining language fluency. SuperMemo is based on the insight that there is an ideal moment to practice what you've learned.
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pedro_daltroA portion of this technique, embodied in a software program called SuperMemo, has enthusiastic users around the world. They apply it mainly to learning languages, and it's popular among people for whom fluency is a necessity — students from Poland or othe
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Brett DenbowPiotr Wozniak has a technique to turn people into geniuses, and a portion of the technique is in a software program called SuperMemo. Users around the world apply it to learning languages and gaining language fluency. SuperMemo is based on the insight that there is an ideal moment to practice what you've learned.
memory learning brain education science supermemo psychology
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Chris LasherAn article on Piotr Wozniak and his SuperMemo regiment.
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annestFortunately, human forgetting follows a pattern. We forget exponentially. A graph of our likelihood of getting the correct answer on a quiz sweeps quickly downward over time and then levels off. This pattern has long been known to cognitive psychology, bu
data Inspiration intelligence lifehacks science opiskelu life
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13 Jun 08
Michel BauwensSuperMemo is based on the insight that there is an ideal moment to practice what you've learned. Practice too soon and you waste your time.
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12 Jun 08
Ryan CPiotr Wozniak has a technique to turn people into geniuses, and a portion of the technique is in a software program called SuperMemo. Users around the world apply it to learning languages and gaining language fluency. SuperMemo is based on the insight ...
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SuperMemo is based on the insight that there is an ideal moment to practice what you've learned. Practice too soon and you waste your time. Practice too late and you've forgotten the material and have to relearn it.
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Wozniak is a kind of algorithmic man. He's exploring what it's like to live in strict obedience to reason. On first encounter, he appears to be one of the happiest people I've ever met.
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The spacing effect posits that the best time to study something is at the moment you are about to forget it--an insight that is useless in the real world, until Piotr Wozniak introduced SuperMemo.
memory memorization theory_of_forgetting wired supermemo tools:mindtools the_spacing_effect learning_design language_learning hermann_ebbinghaus piotr_wozniak linkingthinking assimilating delicious_import
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30 Apr 08
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Jeff GiddensTwenty years ago, Wozniak realized that computers could easily calculate the moment of forgetting if he could discover the right algorithm. SuperMemo is the result of his research. It predicts the future state of a person's memory and schedules informatio
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Habib Jafaryun article sur l'inventeur de SuperMemo et son concept.
memory Lifehacks Learning psychology mind education mémoire Brain
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Doug AdamsSuperMemo is based on the insight that there is an ideal moment to practice what you've learned. Practice too soon and you waste your time. Practice too late and you've forgotten the material and have to relearn it. The right time to practice is just at t
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