In SRS design, Anki and Quantum Country ask you to think of the answer; Duolingo and Execute Program ask you to input an answer.
I’d thought: latter’s likely more effective, but annoying & slow. Surprised to see these studies found little diff in recall: andymatuschak.org/files/papers/L
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(See chapter 6, which describes the three experiments. Some limitations: targets were Swahili–English word associations; performed on smallish sample of undergrads; maximum retrieval interval of a week. This thesis is intensely interesting throughout!)
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More accumulated notes on self-grading vs. machine-grading in SRS design:
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One fun oddball: at least as of Dec ’17, Quizlet presents a multiple-choice input the first time, then transitions to text input / self-graded afterwards. The theory is that recognition is easier than recall, so maybe makes sense to “bootstrap” that way.
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Yes, they have an interesting general task difficulty model:
