I watched this and was able to recall the 20 items. I was impressed. The next morning, I was doing some cleaning and suddenly remembered watching this video. I found I was still able to recall all 20 items, in order and without hesitation. Very happy.
Thank you it really works. I had an MRI today and was able to recall your shopping list whilst stressed inside the tube. Now to use it next shopping trip.
The images you create make sense to you, not necessarily to anyone else. The key is for each individual to create the imagery that makes sense to them . . . the more absurd the better. The same is true for mnemonics, the key to remembering names. 💗🌈🦋✨
I have a concern about the start of this video. It seems to put short term and long term memory together as one, but it's not. I always thought short term memory is the gateway to long term memory and afaik, long term memory is not limited by how much you can memorize at a time. I'm also not a fan of repetition. To me the key to remembering something long term is to combine images and association. You have maybe a mindmap of your textbook with items added for each chapter, then each chapter has a mindmap of its sections, then each section has a mindmap of it's own. So to get to a section you go to the mindmap of the book (in your mind), drill down to chapter, then to section. I find it particularly hard to convert words to images, but if you can have the majority of your map as inter-connected images (association), with practice you can memorize your entire textbook in a short time and retain it until the exam or even further. This is where repetition should be used, but not excessively, just to strengthen those memories. My 2 cents :)
@@ssp4774 You either don't use enough images or your images aren't good enough. The better your images relate to the work and the more memorable your images are, the easier it will be to memorize and retain.
Good stuff-there were a lot of technical books from circa 1950’s- 1980’s on these valuable techniques. An entertainer called Harry Lorayne who was involved in one such publication taught techniques to a tv legend in England called Bob Monkhouse. One of the best memories in the country! Thanks all involved and, all who get benefit out of this valuable programme. ⭐️
George Miller is right. On memory tests, I consistently can't remember the eighth or more thing I'm trying hard to remember. I always get stuck at seven. Amazing!
Wish I knew about this since grade school and this is great for someone like myself who is a visual learner myself and who has bad memory. I know this can advocate for my brain fog and what I'm about to say in my speech as well. Bless you with this video and I'm totally subscribing to you!
Ms V I was shot in the head at 13. I was educated by rote, which to me, is the WORST way to educate someone, in the history of education. I feel sad knowing this now, and wishing I had known this before I was 13. They wouldn't have been able to stick me in, "special education," classes...
Awesome.I have been using chunking to retrieve information without actively thinking about it.Its natural for me.For I 'm a cancerian.I feel things.my sight is connected to my feelings and memory.
I don’t waste my time memorizing grocery list. I want to remember important things. Especially items I need in my long term memory. If I’m in med school. I’m going to be a doctor I want to remember the most important things. Other items I can look up.
You can use anki if you only want to remember concepts, it helps more if you do your own flashcards because you will practice the active learning. If you are studying for an exam or you just want to learn something new I will recommend the Feynman method (you read about the topic, you will explain what you understand about the topic, if you can't you have to read again, if you can you need to simplify the information to something more simple like if you were explaining that to someone who doesn't know anything about that.) Remember something, everybody has their type of learning, the schools only focus on short term memorization and most of the time only explain for visual learners, by the time you will found your perfect method and learn will be more enjoyable. there is a lot of methods like pomodoro method (you study 25 minutes straight and take a break for 5 minutes, you can repeat this process the times you have to). I hope you found this helpfull and I hope you can understand my message because I am not an English native but I tried to be the more correct possible in my sentences. By the way you can search the methods I show you if you want to learn more about.
@@deilu3851 I often do it like that when I have problems with Something specific that no matter how often I repeat I find hard to remember I make an mental image for it and for the rest I like mind maps or Anki
Its cool that theres an AP psychology test that I got to take a course on. I loved the cognition and memory unit. Active memory, chunking, mine palace's, retroactive amnesia and how memories form, memorization techniques, I loved that class so much
From what I've learnt: 1 = paintbrush, which is better for visualising. Imagine painting your item a bright colour. 4. Yacht, 5. Hook, 9. Balloon, 10. bat and ball.
I do this all the time to learn Medical & Psychological Terminology. Court Reporting Briefs! We learn to read from left to right, when reading, not so in some Terminology, such as Medical ❤ In Medical Terminology words u read from right to left, break them apart . Ex. Simple one- - Encephalitis = inflammation of the brain. itis = inflammation, so when u see it in a medical word - inflammation Encphal= Brain Encphal/a/itis The," a," is the combining vowel. Chunking !😂🎧 Plus, love to read and learn new things❣🔮 Shine on ⭐⭐
Ok, I exactly did as you where just back over, this is one hour ago from when you did it 14:00 now, 15:00 1 bread, 2 milk, 3 tomato, 4 soda, 5 turkey, 6 cherries, 7 was strawberry, 8 deodorant, 9 was cucumber, 10 was serial. 09 march 2020. 6 i missed chips now i seen it.
Paul Nowak - Real powerful tools to extend our memory. It would be even more fantastic and fair, mentioning the original source: the NLP accelerated learning and speed reading set by Shelle Rose Charvet. All this and much more in this set. I did use all the smart technics on UCSC - UC Santa Cruz in the 1990s. (Perhaps not on the marked anymore).
Dominic O'Brien is a British mnemonist and an author of memory-related books. He is the eight time World Memory Champion and works as a trainer for Peak Performance Training. Wikipedia Born: August 10, 1957 (age 62 years), United Kingdom ===/=/=/=======//=======/ You break character when you laugh. Keep it simple...
hey dude, when i saw this video i was like omg 30 mins i wont watch it,its blah blah blah.... and now im like it was best 36 mins on youtube ever !!!! thx m8 :)
Top right of your phone screen, has a drop down list of options.You can change the, "Play back speed." Give it a try for listening to video packed full of info :)
I’m preparing for a reading test of 35 questions, 25 of those passages are long and 10 of the passage are short, the I can do is remember all the passages reading alone is not enough. Thanks for the tip I would be applying it to my studies
the first number set was just as easy to remember. I paused the video and chucked it out as 3-129-823-812 and honestly that set of numbers are stuck in my head.
I wish it worked just as well with lists of abstract items, like knowledge, competency, ability etc. Many books are made up of different chapters and everyone has lists. The peg system might work with some, but in the long run it gets all mixed up.
Yes, use when you need it. Major system peg list (00-99), lots of mind palaces, mind maps, alphabet system (an image for every letter), spaced repetition, first principles (learning the basics before getting into details), are all things to develop and implement when needed.
Drives me nuts that they didn't flip the Swan picture to naturally fit the orientation of the number 2 ! (ocd maybe -but still) But I also want to say thx for sharing your technique!
Good for remembering specifically numbered lists - but there are much easier ways to memorise a list of 20 shopping items, such as a highly visualised story, or a mind palace...
You are right, especially mind palace is also fantastic for long term. I only think that it makes sense to start less complex with things like peg and then use the advanced techniques later
Thank~you. I read a cool book about this quite awhile ago. I'm anxious to tell my grandkids about it. I had a different approach to subsequent shopping lists~ instead of changing it all up, I think that I would just keep tho 20 products that you listed assigned to the same 20 numbers and then every time I need something different, I'll assign it it's own number. For example, on my next list, it would say to buy, 1, 2, 3, 9, 10, 12, 13, 15, & 20 and then I'd start with 21 and permanently attach the new items I want to their own number. Eventually, you could just take a list of numbers! {By the way, you should never eat #3 & #9 at the same meal!} {There's a video about that.🤗}
3,129,823,812 is easier for me because I chunk - 6 digit numbers into two 3 digit numbers with a 2 digit year - at work all the time. 19-123987- PEG works but I could write it down so many times in that amount of time...
Just a thought. What if the items are harder to picture. Let’s say scientific names or strange ingredients or medical terms? What’s a good way to memorize several of theses?
Can someone please tell me why they weren't and aren't teaching this in first grade? Can you imagine how much simpler learning would have been. We wouldn't all be, Sheldon Cooper, but we would have all had a much fun, less anxiety driven education! This would have literally, and figuratively, made school more fun and would have made me want to get out of bed every morning, to learn something new... I hated having to learn things by rote...
Another thing about the peg system; instead of wiping the system clean every week, wouldn't be easier to make 51 new pegs so next year for instance, you can say, on January first of last year, I purchased bread, milk, tomatoes, soda, turkey, chips, strawberries, deodorant, cucumbers, and cereal. You'd never have to forget because every new year, you'd create a new 52 peg system!
I watched this and was able to recall the 20 items. I was impressed. The next morning, I was doing some cleaning and suddenly remembered watching this video. I found I was still able to recall all 20 items, in order and without hesitation. Very happy.
Nice
you have basically revolutionized my entire study process. Thank you
Thank you it really works. I had an MRI today and was able to recall your shopping list whilst stressed inside the tube. Now to use it next shopping trip.
What is MRS 👎🏾🤨🧐🧐🧐🤓🤓🤨
1. Chunk the info (familiar chunks)
2. Mindmapping
3. Peg system
J
Touvgh shit
I'll remember that.
Okay thank you
The images you create make sense to you, not necessarily to anyone else. The key is for each individual to create the imagery that makes sense to them . . . the more absurd the better. The same is true for mnemonics, the key to remembering names. 💗🌈🦋✨
This method helped me remember the ten principles of economics and other important information in my economics class.
I have a concern about the start of this video. It seems to put short term and long term memory together as one, but it's not. I always thought short term memory is the gateway to long term memory and afaik, long term memory is not limited by how much you can memorize at a time. I'm also not a fan of repetition. To me the key to remembering something long term is to combine images and association. You have maybe a mindmap of your textbook with items added for each chapter, then each chapter has a mindmap of its sections, then each section has a mindmap of it's own. So to get to a section you go to the mindmap of the book (in your mind), drill down to chapter, then to section. I find it particularly hard to convert words to images, but if you can have the majority of your map as inter-connected images (association), with practice you can memorize your entire textbook in a short time and retain it until the exam or even further. This is where repetition should be used, but not excessively, just to strengthen those memories. My 2 cents :)
@@ssp4774 You either don't use enough images or your images aren't good enough. The better your images relate to the work and the more memorable your images are, the easier it will be to memorize and retain.
Before I saw this I watched several other videos on memory. This one is BY FAR THE BEST! Thank you.
Thank you getting directly to the point!
Good stuff-there were a lot of technical books from circa 1950’s- 1980’s on these valuable techniques. An entertainer called Harry Lorayne who was involved in one such publication taught techniques to a tv legend in England called Bob Monkhouse. One of the best memories in the country! Thanks all involved and, all who get benefit out of this valuable programme. ⭐️
George Miller is right. On memory tests, I consistently can't remember the eighth or more thing I'm trying hard to remember. I always get stuck at seven. Amazing!
Wish I knew about this since grade school and this is great for someone like myself who is a visual learner myself and who has bad memory. I know this can advocate for my brain fog and what I'm about to say in my speech as well. Bless you with this video and I'm totally subscribing to you!
Ms V I was shot in the head at 13. I was educated by rote, which to me, is the WORST way to educate someone, in the history of education. I feel sad knowing this now, and wishing I had known this before I was 13. They wouldn't have been able to stick me in, "special education," classes...
Wow dats powerful
4d
Brilliant wasn't it Ms V. But my memory didn't make me subscribe - you did. Thanx!
Awesome.I have been using chunking to retrieve information without actively thinking about it.Its natural for me.For I 'm a cancerian.I feel things.my sight is connected to my feelings and memory.
1)Chunking
2)Mind Map
3)Peg System(Visualization/in picture)
Thank You for getting directly to the point
I don’t waste my time memorizing grocery list. I want to remember important things. Especially items I need in my long term memory. If I’m in med school. I’m going to be a doctor I want to remember the most important things. Other items I can look up.
You can use anki if you only want to remember concepts, it helps more if you do your own flashcards because you will practice the active learning. If you are studying for an exam or you just want to learn something new I will recommend the Feynman method (you read about the topic, you will explain what you understand about the topic, if you can't you have to read again, if you can you need to simplify the information to something more simple like if you were explaining that to someone who doesn't know anything about that.) Remember something, everybody has their type of learning, the schools only focus on short term memorization and most of the time only explain for visual learners, by the time you will found your perfect method and learn will be more enjoyable. there is a lot of methods like pomodoro method (you study 25 minutes straight and take a break for 5 minutes, you can repeat this process the times you have to). I hope you found this helpfull and I hope you can understand my message because I am not an English native but I tried to be the more correct possible in my sentences. By the way you can search the methods I show you if you want to learn more about.
@@deilu3851 I often do it like that when I have problems with Something specific that no matter how often I repeat I find hard to remember I make an mental image for it and for the rest I like mind maps or Anki
Its cool that theres an AP psychology test that I got to take a course on. I loved the cognition and memory unit. Active memory, chunking, mine palace's, retroactive amnesia and how memories form, memorization techniques, I loved that class so much
I figured this out at varsity, while studying law and it really made a huge difference
From what I've learnt: 1 = paintbrush, which is better for visualising. Imagine painting your item a bright colour. 4. Yacht, 5. Hook, 9. Balloon, 10. bat and ball.
WOW! I'm having a lot of fun with this. I find it educational and something to do when you feel overwhelmed.Thanks.
A: honey, can you buy these things real quick?
B: give me half an hour, i have to imagine those floating cereals
Just some practice then it takes less time
I do this all the time to learn Medical & Psychological Terminology. Court Reporting Briefs!
We learn to read from left to right, when reading, not so in some Terminology, such as Medical ❤
In Medical Terminology words u read from right to left, break them apart . Ex. Simple one- - Encephalitis = inflammation of the brain.
itis = inflammation, so when u see it in a medical word - inflammation
Encphal= Brain
Encphal/a/itis
The," a," is the combining vowel.
Chunking !😂🎧
Plus, love to read and learn new things❣🔮
Shine on ⭐⭐
Why did i not find this video in my school times😭
Idk but I know why I didn't. When I graduated we didnt even have VCR tapes yet.
for me there was no internet
@@susieinthecountry4434
Yes no cell phone either.
Same feelings here
I'm in school right now
Ok, I exactly did as you where just back over, this is one hour ago from when you did it 14:00 now, 15:00 1 bread, 2 milk, 3 tomato, 4 soda, 5 turkey, 6 cherries, 7 was strawberry, 8 deodorant, 9 was cucumber, 10 was serial. 09 march 2020. 6 i missed chips now i seen it.
Paul Nowak - Real powerful tools to extend our memory. It would be even more fantastic and fair, mentioning the original source: the NLP accelerated learning and speed reading set by Shelle Rose Charvet. All this and much more in this set. I did use all the smart technics on UCSC - UC Santa Cruz in the 1990s. (Perhaps not on the marked anymore).
30:05 the video begins
Thanks giulia to save our precious time
Not really if you havent seen this stuff before!
Worth investing the time to watch the whole video!
Pooping is the one thing
Thanks for these techniques I will implement it to my study.
Dominic O'Brien is a British mnemonist and an author of memory-related books. He is the eight time World Memory Champion and works as a trainer for Peak Performance Training. Wikipedia
Born: August 10, 1957 (age 62 years), United Kingdom
===/=/=/=======//=======/
You break character when you laugh. Keep it simple...
Thank you because I am going to apply this technique to Erickson's psychosocial. I am studying for my LMSW.
Good and useful information presented about memorization. Will apply this to my upcoming classes.
hey dude, when i saw this video i was like omg 30 mins i wont watch it,its blah blah blah.... and now im like it was best 36 mins on youtube ever !!!! thx m8 :)
Foxy Angel I totally agree I was the best 36 mins
Foxy Angel thats EXACTLY what I was thinking!
Foxy Angel cool 😎
Foxy Angel so true and it still holds good! Amazing video!
Top right of your phone screen, has a drop down list of options.You can change the, "Play back speed." Give it a try for listening to video packed full of info :)
I love this guy. It helps thanks a lot.
I’m preparing for a reading test of 35 questions, 25 of those passages are long and 10 of the passage are short, the I can do is remember all the passages reading alone is not enough. Thanks for the tip I would be applying it to my studies
Did it work on you?
Excellent.... I needed this in my university 😔
Very effective. Thank you.
this was good, I actually do this and called it word association...it works
Very well presented. The peg images were fantastic.
Thanks so much. This helps. I will definitely teach my son about the technique.
Technique
I've always wondered how to make pegs for numbers past 10. This video explained it perfectly.....
This is incredible. I got to Rasmussen college and I am sharing this with my teachers and peers. Thanks so much this has helped me more than you know
the first number set was just as easy to remember. I paused the video and chucked it out as 3-129-823-812 and honestly that set of numbers are stuck in my head.
Thank you for sharing. You have such a good Talent to teacher .and have big heart too .
What if in the first section of a book we have information about who, when, where, what, why, and how? How to implement the system?
are you roblox
or a book
Extremely well explained
Thanks I really need this for my ADHD
I wish it worked just as well with lists of abstract items, like knowledge, competency, ability etc. Many books are made up of different chapters and everyone has lists. The peg system might work with some, but in the long run it gets all mixed up.
U must combine it with mind palaces and many other systems in conjunction
Yes, use when you need it. Major system peg list (00-99), lots of mind palaces, mind maps, alphabet system (an image for every letter), spaced repetition, first principles (learning the basics before getting into details), are all things to develop and implement when needed.
lol, a week later, I still remember the list. My wife remembers it, some work colleagues also, after I quickly explained to them.
Great techniques
For the list I used 'BreMilTom SoTurchip StraDeoCumCer' to remember, something like that
This is a game changer! Thank you!!!!
Thanks for this. It really works I have followed it well
Dude very good combination list you made but anyway this is really wonderful technique and i will use this.
Thanks a lot!
Drives me nuts that they didn't flip the Swan picture to naturally fit the orientation of the number 2 ! (ocd maybe -but still)
But I also want to say thx
for sharing your technique!
The same thought crossed my mind! Ha, ha!
Thank you, this video is awesome!
Thank you for sharing the video, sir.
Great techniques thanks!
You guys are the best
Thanks! Good stuff!
You just changed the way I remember things man
excellent video..thank you so much..
Excellent healthful memory techniques! Thanks for sharing with us! Very Informative! :)
Good for remembering specifically numbered lists - but there are much easier ways to memorise a list of 20 shopping items, such as a highly visualised story, or a mind palace...
You are right, especially mind palace is also fantastic for long term. I only think that it makes sense to start less complex with things like peg and then use the advanced techniques later
You are a genius.
New comer but very impressed
Very helpful 👌 thanksss
The trick to remembering what you read is to read what really interests you.
Thank~you. I read a cool book about this quite awhile ago. I'm anxious to tell my grandkids about it.
I had a different approach to subsequent shopping lists~ instead of changing it all up, I think that I would just keep tho 20 products that you listed assigned to the same 20 numbers and then every time I need something different, I'll assign it it's own number. For example, on my next list, it would say to buy, 1, 2, 3, 9, 10, 12, 13, 15, & 20 and then I'd start with 21 and permanently attach the new items I want to their own number.
Eventually, you could just take a list of numbers!
{By the way, you should never eat #3 & #9 at the same meal!} {There's a video about that.🤗}
Excellent stuff. Nice way of explaining. I am going to send all my students to your website. Thanks!
THAT WAS A VERY INFORMATIVE AND CREATIVE VENTURE. GREAT JOB!
This is awesome!! Thank you for uploading it!!
Splendid stuff. Thanks for sharing :-)
Amazingly so simple. Thank you
Thank you for your help and well explained the concept
What an amazing webinar.
1.Outstanding! I have learned a lot! Thanks.
Great one! Thank you😍
3,129,823,812 is easier for me because I chunk - 6 digit numbers into two 3 digit numbers with a 2 digit year - at work all the time.
19-123987-
PEG works but I could write it down so many times in that amount of time...
thank you what a wonderful way to remember and fun ;)
10 out of 10 i remembered...wowwww
I'm really surprised myself 😀😀😀😀.
Thank you very much!!!
¡Muchas gracias!
Very interesting stuff!
Just a thought. What if the items are harder to picture. Let’s say scientific names or strange ingredients or medical terms? What’s a good way to memorize several of theses?
LOVE, LOVE, LOVE this!!!
Can 8hjjkkbbjikjjb
(+_+):-$(+_+)
An
Very good teachnic. .Thanks
thanks this really works
I feel so smart right now!
Wow I love this! It will benefit the my study about to start, thanks!
I will always remember your list instead of mine list...good job spending straight 30 minutes to memorize 10 things list..wow
I remember everything although using my own visual images.
thank you sir I think it will very helpful thing one again thanks
Interesting video
Chunking system
9:53 Peg system
I'm taking an exam that has a section with memory and coding, your technique is going to help me so much. Thank you :-)
That's great, I'll use it!
I liked this and enjoyed your video!
very useful for all learners......of all ages!
Can someone please tell me why they weren't and aren't teaching this in first grade? Can you imagine how much simpler learning would have been. We wouldn't all be, Sheldon Cooper, but we would have all had a much fun, less anxiety driven education! This would have literally, and figuratively, made school more fun and would have made me want to get out of bed every morning, to learn something new... I hated having to learn things by rote...
Another thing about the peg system; instead of wiping the system clean every week, wouldn't be easier to make 51 new pegs so next year for instance, you can say, on January first of last year, I purchased bread, milk, tomatoes, soda, turkey, chips, strawberries, deodorant, cucumbers, and cereal. You'd never have to forget because every new year, you'd create a new 52 peg system!
Great technic helps much than l expected thank you