@michael_nielsen - I have a q about your excellent LTM post.
How long is the longest ordered list that you keep as a single Anki card? I sometimes find the ordering to be important, but it will often take longer than 10 seconds to enumerate the items.
http://augmentingcognition.com/ltm.html
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Replying to @nottombrown
I don't use it much for ordered lists. I've got a few of three items. What kinds of things are you remembering?
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Replying to @michael_nielsen
Here’s an example. I’d like to remember to try the earlier strategies before the later ones.pic.twitter.com/nsJQHLXfaK
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Replying to @nottombrown @michael_nielsen
Here’s a small card refactor. I care most about trying the easy things before time-consuming work like bringing in a new model or doing a hyperparam sweep. This seems better, but I feel like it could be broken down further.pic.twitter.com/64C9zXWXmV
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Replying to @nottombrown @michael_nielsen
This is also more of a trigger-action-plan than a fact. Not yet clear to me if Anki will be effective for installing trigger-action-plans
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Replying to @nottombrown
I've found it helpful to put in concrete trigger situations (the more vivid the details the better; it seems easy to generalize), and say "What should you do [to achieve goal X]?"
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Replying to @michael_nielsen @nottombrown
I am not yet sure, BTW, about how effective Anki is going to be for very strongly procedural memories like this. I've found it great for declarative memory, & I'm able to effectively proceduralize through a two-step process (recall, followed by an initially slow implementatin).
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But I'm still experimenting with using it more directly for procedural stuff. There is research showing that the spacing effect holds for procedural memory, but it's not clear just how similar the effect is in the two cases.
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