How to remember everything (Activate long-term memory using neuroscience)
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 16 ม.ค. 2024
- In this video, I share a neuroscience tip to help you learn anything faster. I use these 2 questions all the time now whenever I am learning something new. Especially when I find the topic a bit difficult. It is so effective and liberating to know I can learn anything and not forget!
Book 1:1 Chat with me:
topmate.io/jaelin_lee
I’ve listened to hours of videos from neuroscientists about memory on TH-cam. This piece of art is the most fast forward straight to the point and explicit video I’ve watched!
1) Can I understand what is said in this video? Yes of course…
2) will I use it again? Definitely for the rest of my life
🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾❤
@arnoldwoumfp Hi Arnold, glad to hear! Curious what you are learning currently and what you imagine as your ideal self in the future. Thanks for sharing your thoughts! :)
@@withjaelinlee it was very complicated stuff. The proof is that I’ve forgotten it. Certainly my brain thought that I will not use it again 😅
@@arnoldwoumfo haha. I see. Thanks for your reply! 🤣
Not remembering is a blessing in disguise, you don’t want to remember the bad experiences.
Can’t agree more! Noticing and expressing emotions as they are felt helps prevent the accumulation of bad experiences in long-term memory. I made a video about this here if you want to check it out :)
th-cam.com/video/57n6jFBi09c/w-d-xo.htmlsi=Axhv_aeoHpAKaZlS
The chat gpt helped immensely I can easily go through complex topic easily without having to do big break plus it's fun. Thanks
@watcheronly71 Glad to know it worked out for you! You are making learning fun. That’s the most important fuel for learning. Keep it up! :)
I recently created a video about making learning fun using kids books. Check it out if you are curious :)
th-cam.com/video/ZxXLBy26UcM/w-d-xo.htmlsi=55iLvvahq7Q8eXJT
This is very informative indeed. I took notes and I'm definitely looking forward to try this out. Thanks
so Informative, best 3 min talk about long term Memory on TH-cam.Thanks
Thank you for your kind words. Hope you check out my other videos, too! :)
I have decided to learn for myself first , it doesnt matter exames or what ever , since then i never forgot
Thank you for the informations
So glad to hear! Keep it up :)
Ty
Im a lifelong learner and these are excellent tips! I took notes, thank you!
Thanks, Amy! I just published a new video that I think you will like, too :) th-cam.com/video/pwx2Ruih_9M/w-d-xo.htmlsi=tYMMwz_3zcnLenuT
Love love love finding your channel ❤❤
Thank you so much!!
I like to share my story, which just happened yesterday. The interviewer asked me what is pass-by-reference and pass-by values. It was the topic I studied around two months ago but I didn't review it. But since I use a similar example to study, I can remember easily and also explain the example to give my answer 😁
Thanks for sharing Alex. It seems like you’ve experienced the less known secret ingredient for learning - Forgetting!
When we are taking a break from a topic, our brain does the job for us, making connections. With the fact that you used similar examples to study after, it probably helped you with retrieving what you learned by active recall. Not merely remembering, but actively utilizing the memory with a slight variation for a new example.
Feel free to share more of your positive learning experiences for others to get inspired from! We are all in this together :)
Very, very good; please provide more. as this will be part of my watch programming. this is better than my other watches like New Cycles and blooper videos.
Thank you very much Steven! Making videos and sharing it in a concise way is a new challenge for me, too. But, I am really enjoying the journey. I feel like I am growing so much along the way. See you in the next video :)
This is true. You just gave me an idea.
Thank you very much
I´ll share these tips with my friends!
Good information
I will try it ❤❤❤
you're great thanks for that :D
Thank you very much!
You're welcome! @bernhardhentschel5037
Amazing vid,thanks for sharing
I want to ask a question like i have some topic that i have studied but have good info about but i have to study then again so how to start bcuz starting them again feels little boring but I have to
First, I would look at the keywords/titles of each chapter of the topic. Then, I’d write down what I already know about it. If I encounter a question or if I am unclear, I’d start exploring from there. Another way is to quiz yourself on the topic first. Then, start learning about the areas that you got it wrong.
Thank you, will try my best.@@withjaelinlee
❤❤❤❤❤
thank you for making short videos
What other learning skills related videos do you watch that are informative, but too long?
i'm just appreciating your direct to the point vids. maybe soon i'll suggest content aligned with your niche. just do your thing ma'am 😊
Biology >>>>memorization 😢 i will try my best
Can you find a way to make biology fun? Try to see it from many different angles.
If I were you, probably I will create puzzles with different body parts, create games with family and friends about different symptoms and pretend that I am a doctor or scientist, etc. Maybe I’d purchase 3D body parts/molecules app or physical replicas online. And, I’d try to create stories, play guess-the-drawing games with it, etc.
@@withjaelinlee 😃OK
@@withjaelinlee wow such a good Idea.
@kuldeep7069 Hey Kuldeep. Thanks! I just purchased the 3D models of brain and body organs anatomy myself from Amazon! I am not a med student, but I am fascinated by neuroscience and how human body functions. I plan on using these models to explain things in my future videos if it helps. Stay tuned! :)
If you’re curious, these are what I just bought. Can’t wait to receive it! :
www.amazon.ca/gp/aw/d/B0BZPSPDPN?ref=ppx_pt2_mob_b_prod_image
www.amazon.ca/gp/aw/d/B08GFPZ6LP?ref=ppx_pt2_mob_b_prod_image
🙏❤️🙏
Thanks
Your words are beautiful ❤ would you please tell us more about yourself what you do and where are you from
Hey Abdullah, thanks for your message! I work as an AI Consultant with clients in US, Canada, Europe. I am from South Korea originally. I have been living in Canada for over 10 years. I have love for reading books and seeking for wisdoms beyond limit. I am a tinkerer who continuously experimenting ways to break boundaries of human potential. I have my own ups and downs, but I feel liberating when I feel the moment of insight. So, I am on a journey of sharing my authenticity and insights in hopes of attracting and gathering like-minded souls who uplift each other. If my message positively influences 1 person at a time, I am content :)
As a next step - I am trying to come up with ways to interact more with a community of warm-hearted souls, in hopes to break the limit of our brains and minds together.
Check out my LinkedIn profile:
www.linkedin.com/in/jaelin-lee-23678458
@@withjaelinlee Really love your thinking and ideas you think for others my prayers are with you you will achieve much more in your life and may you go so Far and achieve all your Goals and Desires ♥ 🥀 am subscribing to your channel am physiotherapist your ideas help me too to get more further toward my goals
That warms my heart. Thank you for sharing. Sending my sincere support for your journey towards your dreams :)
What if i am already practicing this everyday 😊 i guess i am on right path then ❤
Hi Vivek. That’s awesome! Feel free to share any other learning tips that helped you along the way when you were struggling in the past, if any. We are all in this together - Breaking free from our limits! :)
Im studying for upsc how should i apply this method
Thanks for your question. Can you share a bit more about where you’re stuck?
@@withjaelinleeso upse is a very very competitive exam in India to get into civil services
So prob he struggles with retaining facts and information like names of imp people , dates etc
Как забыть плохое
@valboolin3538 that’s a great question! It has been asked a few times here in the comment. I will look into creating a video for that :)
Interesting.. using chatgpt for explanation.. why didn't i think of it tho ? Props to you. But beware chatgpt can give you wrong answers in highschool maths and physics problems..(almost 95% of the times i asked it to explain me a numerical or a question it did so but arrived at an wrong answer..better get it checked with your lecturer rather than gpt)
So true! ChatGPT is very bad at math questions. We also need to ask both sides of coins. For example, is honey good for health? And, is honey bad for health? So, we can check for biases and its tendencies to being too agreeable to what we are saying sometimes. Thanks for pointing that out! :)
@@withjaelinlee no problem.. keep up the good work 🤗👍
what is the secret in passing maths
Being good at maths.
Unfortunately, I have no secrete to passing math. I passed math in school with good grades, but forgot most of it after many years because i didn’t study in a right way. If passing is the goal, there’s many techniques to use (do your homework, memorize, practice multiple questions of similar kind, increase your English comprehension skills to understand the question correctly and quickly, etc.). But, if truly understanding a topic is a goal, first getting yourself really be interested in the topic is the key. Fun games, real life experiments, reading about interesting histories about how certain equations/concepts came about, reading kids books, etc. could be some of the ways. Then see what question is generated within you. How would you solve it if no one knew how to solve it?
A famous Korean professor, Dr. Nongmun Hwang shared a technique like this:
Spend 20min or so to try to answer the question yourself within your head. Then, look at the solution. Start by easy question. Gain confidence. Then, increase difficulty and time you spend thinking about the solution.
This iterative practice over time will help you enhance the ability to solve the most difficult problems.
@@withjaelinlee
I used this technique whilst working part-time and studying maths full-time. You'd be surprised just how big you can make the problem and solution space in your head, even for complicated problems. There is an added advantage. You dream about the solution too. Often I'd wake up in the morning and I knew if I pen to paper I'd get the correct solution in a few hours.
Likewise. That’s exactly what this professor talked about as well. It applies not only to math, but also to many other topics.
I used to tutor students in maths when I was younger. There were two kinds of students I had. Students who wanted As to become doctors or to do STEM degrees and the other were students who consistently scored 40% to 45%. The approach used for both was different. I'll just describe how I helped students who were failing. First I'd give them a standard exam suitable for their level. Sure enough, they'd score 40%. My job was to turn this into 60%. Once I had determined what kind of problems they could not answer, I'd then determine why they couldn't get the right answer. There would be various reasons for this. They might just hate these kinds of problems. They might just not understand what is being asked, or how to analyse the problem. They might not know how to solve it in the sense of what formulas to use etc. once this was known and explored, we'd ONLY do these problems until they became good at them. We'd tackle the kind of problems they were hopeless at FIRST. Once we'd addressed these problems somewhat, we'd do the standard test again. Their marks would always improve. We'd keep doing these difficult problems for them until they couldn't get any better at them, which would usually meant they'd max out at 60% in the standard exam, which was usually quite acceptable to them.
How to remember everything? Know it already 😆
In the video, my message is to start from what you know (not know it already). It will uncover what you don’t know. And, follow your curiosity to generate question. The act of “trying to answer what you think the answer might be (even if it might be wrong) first before looking at/searching for the answer” is what triggers your brain to pay attention. Therefore, you can remember it longer and better after seeing the correct answer.
Thanks so much