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Ask HN: Is it possible to train and improve your memory and recall?

67 points| ishjoh | 3 years ago

When I search for ways to improve memory there are plenty of articles to do basics like exercise, eat well, get lots of sleep. Assuming you're already doing those things are there other ways to improve your memory and recall?

Ideally I would love to be able to easily recall something I read from a book, or easily recall something someone told me in a conversation.

62 comments

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[+] Bandrsnatch|3 years ago|reply
I have developed my own technique that has worked well for my children and myself. I ask myself after reading a chapter, doing homework or learning new information the following questions. What have I learned? How does this help me? What do I do with this new knowledge? The result is that by thinking about what I have learned I understand it better and it becomes lodged in my memory. I basically make the new information part of my thinking and observing life. When you think how can I use or apply this new information it becomes part of your working knowledge and is not easily forgotten. I have tried many of the other ways of memorizing but have found that if you come to learning with a joy and a willingness to immerse oneself you don't have to work that hard. Always asking questions puts your mind in a state to learn and remember. I hope that this is helpful.
[+] mateo1|3 years ago|reply
This is what works for me too. My ability to recall information from material I consume took a big hit after years of reading things online that can be forgotten inconsequentially, with no direct implications in real life and no post-reading discussion with peers or teachers such as in a school or academic environment.

What I found is that without a direct challenge to your understanding after reading something, be it through formalised tests, questions or social competition, you forget to learn. Your attention and learning mechanisms become defective.

Asking yourself a few simple questions about what you just read and how it is useful or important to you helps a lot.

[+] zmgsabst|3 years ago|reply
According to a teacher friend, asking these questions before helps as well.

Eg, “Why am I going to learn this?”

The other good question I’ve heard is “how does this relate to other things I know? — are there connections?”

[+] DLTADragonHawk|3 years ago|reply
Funnily enough, I think this may be accidently done by parents for their kids learning improvement. When they get home at a young age parents, or atleast mine, would ask what I learned in school. My memory from times I answered faithfully vs started answering "nothing" seems to be rooted deeper. Could simply be due to age though.
[+] drakonka|3 years ago|reply
I think this is a version of what I do via blogging. When I learn something new, writing a blog post about it tends to help it stick better as well as exposing and clarifying remaining misunderstandings.
[+] ishjoh|3 years ago|reply
Thanks, I will definitely try this.
[+] jmcphers|3 years ago|reply
If this topic interests you, I highly recommend the book Moonwalking with Einstein[1], which is written by a journalist about people who participate in memory competitions. These people assert that their memories are no better than anyone else's, but that they have learned a variety of techniques (most outlined in the book) that enable them to have a level of recall that seems supernatural to the uninitiated.

My recollection (hah!) is that there's no known way to just make your brain remember stuff better on its own, but if there is something specifically you don't want to forget, there are a bunch of ways to make sure it doesn't get forgotten.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moonwalking_with_Einstein

[+] dhosek|3 years ago|reply
The author Joshua Foer, is the brother of the novelist Jonathan Safran Foer (Everything is Illuminated, Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close).
[+] Barrin92|3 years ago|reply
My personal experience when it comes with improving memory is chess. When I started playing as a kid I could not remember even the first ten moves of games I played. When I got better I was able to replay an entire game if it wasn't too long, and when I studied a lot while playing semi competitively years later I learned to play blindfolded, which I always thought was basically magic and talent growing up.

One interesting thing about the nature of this kind of memory is that chess players, if they're really good can do this with many boards and recall years of games. But only if the positions make sense. When you give chess players a board with randomized, nonsensical placement, most cannot remember it and are no better than your average person.

I took away from it that extreme memory is often related to the skill overall. You can only memorize something if its embedded in a context, deep in your muscle memory and 'makes sense'. I suppose this is why mnemonics exist.

[+] wheybags|3 years ago|reply
Sounds kind of like Huffman coding - the games you can remember all have a short encoding, and a random board has a long one
[+] dragontamer|3 years ago|reply
Yes within a field.

Ex: You'll find it impossible to memorize music until you learn how to think and remember notes. Once you understand rhythm (8th notes, quarter-notes), and pitches (C, D, E, F, G, A, B C), you start to remember music.

You then study common patterns, such as Blue's Scale (C, Eb, F, F#, G, Bb). Or common chord patterns (I - vi - IV - V progression), and suddenly music is just "oh, right, the common chord progression in this rhythm".

Its not that people are memorizing more-and-more information. Its that they're memorizing __LESS__ information, but smarter information. Its far easier to remember "Loved" by The Beatles is the common-chord progression in 4/4 common time, rather than actually trying to memorize the individual notes and rhythm.

Then you can kinda-sorta forget little details (maybe play a few mistakes), but no one else remembers it as well as you do (not because your memory is better, because you have a better system of memorizing). So those little mistakes are forgotten by the audience.

-------

I'm playing Age of Empires 2, and the same thing for build orders. As a beginner, memorizing "2 houses -> 6 on sheep -> 4 on wood -> 7th food on boar lure -> 3rd house + mill -> 4 on berries" is difficult.

But then more advanced build orders are "British build order" is same as standard, except with 5 on sheep to handle the +25% bonus to shepherds.

It is said that you can only ever remember 7 things at a time. But those 7 things can be advanced concepts built up of *other* sets of ~7 things.

[+] elefantastisch|3 years ago|reply
The basic idea is that you can only hold so many chunks in working memory (which is a necessary precursor to long-term memory), but the more you know, the better you can chunk information, thus remembering more.

There is a similar phenomenon in chess where grandmasters can very quickly memorize a board position from a game, but are basically no better than any random person off the street at memorizing the position of pieces placed randomly in a way that would never occur in a game. They aren't actually memorizing the position of pieces, they're memorizing the game state in a way that makes sense to them and lets them re-create the position of the pieces.

So, practically, a good way to train your memory is to learn more about the area in which you want to be able to remember things.

I don't think this helps with the concrete example of "something someone told me in a conversation" though. It might help with "something I read from a book" though because you could encode that information better if you know more about the subject.

[+] ThrowITout4321|3 years ago|reply
There's been studies of people that have complete recall. People that can remember every day of their lives. They've found that the brain areas that are needed to commit long term memories are larger in them than in most people. There's a suspicion that those people have worked their memory so much that the brain has made the needed change. Implying that the more you try to remember things the better your memory will get. But it's all hypothetical right now.

However you can use memory technics that will help you remember. There's the memory palace, there's creating a story so silly about what you are trying to remember that it helps you remember the items and there's also spaced repetition. Which is a technic that reenforces memories just as the brain starts to forget them.

No one really knows if practice improves memory but it can't hurt.

[+] rebelos|3 years ago|reply
This is the best answer here. All memories decay unless you practice recall in the appropriate manner. And I agree with the theory that practicing recall is likely to improve your brain's overall capacity for recollection. That would resemble what we see in other aspects of brain function.
[+] mguerville|3 years ago|reply
Depends on what types of memories but for instance recalling sequences (of numbers for instance) is relatively easy using "memory palaces" given our inate ability to organize information geospatially. The book Moonwalking with Einstein is a great story on that matter, about a journalist teaching himself the skills after all competitors in a memory tournament told him "anyone could do it"
[+] tiagod|3 years ago|reply
My sense of direction and orientation is nearly non-existent. I have a really hard time imagining physical places. Any alternatives to mind palace for people like me?
[+] ishjoh|3 years ago|reply
Thanks for the suggestion, searching Memory Palaces shows a lot of material I wasn't aware of.
[+] nunez|3 years ago|reply
My memory is generally horrible, but I've learned that my ability to recall things improves greatly if I write them down.

I learned this from maintaining a mood journal for the last year and realizing that I can recall events in my life much more easily than before I did this.

This is also how I learned to program. I rewrite examples in tutorials instead of copying and pasting, and I read things instead of watching videos. It has served me extremely well. I can still mostly implement fundamental data structures without hitting Hacker Rank, for example, despite not having done them in quite some time.

I also don't bother remembering things I can delegate to memory aids, like my email, calendars, or the Reminders app on my iPhone (which is a ROCK SOLID app; kudos to the developers at Apple who maintain this lifesaving tool). This applies to phone calls, shopping lists, personal events, etc. I said that my memory was horrible earlier because without these aids, I will forget (and have forgotten) stuff all of the time!

ymmv, of course. Everyone is different!

[+] sizzle|3 years ago|reply
Anki flash cards and spaced repetition help encode concepts into your working memory over long enough time horizon.
[+] ishjoh|3 years ago|reply
Thank you for this response. Ideally I'm looking for a way to improve my general abilities so that I don't need flash cards, but instead I would just remember something someone has told me, do you know of anything like that?
[+] disambiguation|3 years ago|reply
I have an abysmal memory, my mind is more oriented towards mental models and logic versus memorizing facts and events.

I've enjoyed one particular exercise. Its based off a story I read where Navy Admirals are able to study a deck of 52 cards and remember the entire order in 60s. So basically, take N cards and spend 60s memorizing them, then let another 60s pass, then test yourself. I think the most I ever got was like 12 cards.

I tried also doing more long term exercises, i.e here's a sequence of 4 cards, I'll come back in 7 days and try to recall the order.

Overall, the improvements were marginal.

Maybe there are better exercises, but something I've found to be orders of magnitude more effective is simply note-taking. Mac notes are really convenient for this because they're searchable. It's a tedious habit to form and takes discipline when starting, but IMO really pays off in the long run when the content aggregates.

My dream hobby project is to create a kind of "second brain" program that is primarily note taking but sits on top of a "knowledge graph" so i can kind of google search my memory, or view it like a twitter feed. I know there's a million apps our there that probably fit this bill, but I already have a specific vision in mind for this app.

[+] 2easy|3 years ago|reply
Obsidian mate, try it.
[+] sysadm1n|3 years ago|reply
Recall for me has always been about muscle memory. If I was in a coma for 2-3 years, would I be able to unlock my password manager app so easily? Somehow it's the muscle memory that goes first, then the actual passphrase. Like, I remember PIN codes because they have a certain 'ring' to them. Like a number has a certain sound to it, you know?
[+] kelseyfrog|3 years ago|reply
Yes, for a time I committed to learning hanzi on memrise. No only did I get better at the recall, I got better at learning how to learn about recall. Rather than experiencing a linear improvement in recall as I worked through the material, I got better at learning new characters as well. It wasn't clear if I was generally improving at recall in a global sense, or that this was a domain-specific improvement (say by learning to chunk at the level of radicals) or a bit of both. Regardless, the phenomenon had a noticeable effect.

In my academic experience, teachers and professors were so adamant about not memorizing that I had under-utilized it as a skill. It was nice to employ it for once even if just to learn that it is a skill that can be improved.

[+] noufalibrahim|3 years ago|reply
The book "Deep Work" contains a chapter on memorisation which recommends a few methods (memory palace etc.) and a few exercises (memorise a deck of cards) etc. It starts off with an interesting story about an acquaintance of the author who was memorising iirc The Torah.

My wife's late grandfather used to spend a lot of time memorising religious scripture and solving mathematical puzzles and coming up many by himself.

He was extremely sharp till the second of his death. Very articulate and completely aware of everything. I've come to think of memorisation as mental exercise that spills over into other "parts" of the brain and generally functions as something to "keep you young".

[+] gralx|3 years ago|reply
Yes, it is. John von Neumann memorized math formulas. Keats memorized Shakespeare. The whole of Homer's work is oral story-telling passed down through generations of memorizers. There is a World Memory Championships.

You would probably like Joshua Foer's book Moonwalking with Einstein.

Developing memory is not a panacea for intelligence or a replacement for sound thinking. Some elite memory athletes assert that they're not that smart and attribute their success only to working very hard at memorizing.

[+] rebelos|3 years ago|reply
Von Neumann had a memory that was considered exceptional even amongst those of the various geniuses of his time. He's one of very few humans regarded as having had close to a photographic memory.
[+] mbakke|3 years ago|reply
Recent studies[1][2] have shown that memories are much more interlinked in the brain than previously thought.

Similar to the chess examples elsewhere in this thread, the key to a good memory is utilizing more of the brain when storing them. When reading a book, if you vividly experience a certain passage instead of just reading/memorizing the words, the text will become more easily accessible in various situations, e.g. when you feel similar to the main character.

For conversation, trying to recall the context (place, time, surroundings), may just bring the quote you search for to the forefront.

This is distinct from how you store "facts", which is more like a hash table you can scan through. Episodic memory is more abstract and can be suppressed by a number of factors, such as negative emotions about parts of the context.

Disclaimer: not a neurologist, mostly speaking from own experience.

1: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/04/220407141911.h...

2: https://medicalxpress.com/news/2022-01-memories-brain-potent...

[+] toast0|3 years ago|reply
Summarizing your request from comments, you're looking to improve what I'd call your random recall of unstudied things.

That's something I'm naturally pretty good at (which is a blessing and a curse), so I don't really know how to help you, but I can confirm it gets a lot harder when my exposure to the thing to recall was when I was tired, or not eating well, and regular excercise helps with mental tasks in many ways; distractions usually don't help, but the distractions may be memorable, so there's that.

I think this can probably be somewhat trained. Reading books and taking quizzes about the books could be a way, but if you study the book instead of read it, you're practicing studying, not whatever this unstudied recall is. You could try taking the quizzes immediately after, until you get good, then try to increase the time between exposure and recall. There's some amount of content where you watch a film clip and then they ask you about details, but those are usually trying to trick you/are more about attracting your attention to one thing so you ignore something else.

[+] leke|3 years ago|reply
The way I remember things for tests is to summarise something to as little as possible. Then without looking, write out the summary. If I have to check my notes, I complete it and then try again. Once I have written it out independently, I can express the ideas in more detail if pressed. You should revise the notes at least once a day. If there is something you had forgotten, write them out again.
[+] ninesnines|3 years ago|reply
Yes!

There are individuals who create memory palaces and are able to memorise hundreds and hundreds or random letters or numbers. This is just practice, anyone could do it.

Beyond that it becomes easier to remember things as you know more about a topic. This is because of associativity that happens, and the synpapses will allow for associativity and priming. This will create networks that you can pull from!