Records Smashed at (Human) Memory Championship 67
Pika the Mad writes "Wired News has a neat story about the recent U.S.A. National Memory Championship.'The finalists competed in three brand-new recall events that forced them to remember and recite aloud random words, personality characteristics of guests at a fictional tea party and the order of cards in two decks of playing cards, parroting answers in front of a crowd of onlookers, photographers and video cameras.'
The winner claims that in the world finals he'll be competing against people who can memorize an entire deck of cards in 30 seconds."
Mnemonic Devices (Score:5, Insightful)
I guess I've always thought of them as indexes for remembering things. You're storing more information but the keys are easier for you to remember and they hold within them something meaningful about the data.
Oddly, though, often the most bizarre mnemonic devices work the best as the Wikipedia article states: For an article with a little more information, check out the NYTimes coverage [nytimes.com].
Unfortunately, the Wired article only gives us one line sentences from the contestants like: Wired, that is pure journalistic gold. Perhaps you'd like to rail them with another question like, "What do you like to do for fun with your friends?"
I'm sure it helps you in school, what I want to know is how in the hell do you do that? Does anyone on Slashdot know if people who win these competitions actually use mnemonic devices or are they just gifted savants?
Re:Mnemonic Devices (Score:5, Interesting)
'I woke up to my Alarm Clock, which also had a banana on top, which was weird. Sitting up in my bed, I saw a mouse hanging from the end of my bed. I grabbed a spoon to try remove it...'
Obviously depending on how much you have to remember and what you have to remember the amout of extra story can be shortend to nearly the key items, but as long as you can remember the story in whole, there's little to stop you from realling out a list of items.
When I had my dyslexia test done, one of the tests there was to listen to a set of numbers, and wait 10 seconds, then repeate them. I then also had to do it again in reverse with a diffrent set of numbers; the number of digits getting longer with each try. The way I managed to do well in it was to see the numbers in front of me, as if they were neon signs, and then make them dissapear when I had said them. This also allowed me to read them off in any order. Normally the sweetspot for recall is 7, plus or minus two items. I managed to make it to 11 digits in order, 9 in reverse, which is fairly good.
I would wager that people who learn sequences of things would have techniques similar to this.
NeoThermic
Re:Mnemonic Devices (Score:2)
I have a near photographic memory for certain types of things... for instance, when I was in high school, in my US history class, I read the entire history book the day before school started, and for the entire rest of the year, when I wanted to recall something, I recalled the page it was on, then reread it off th
Re:Mnemonic Devices (Score:1)
To this day I still remember My Dear Aunt Sally (order of operators Multiplication Division Addition Subtraction). I think little mnemonic devices like that are very helpful. Sticks better in my withering mind. Ive even taught to my kids...
Re:Mnemonic Devices (Score:1)
Being polite to your elders helps you remember that things in Parenthesis precede the basic Multiplication, Division, Addition, and Subtraction!
Re:Mnemonic Devices (Score:1)
-Augie
Mnemonic Devices - A rude one :) (Score:1)
Sally
Opened
Her
Thighs
And
Her
C***
Opened
Also
I never failed the maths tests involving trig after I'd learnt that
Re:Mnemonic Devices - A rude one :) (Score:2)
Re:Mnemonic Devices - A rude one :) (Score:1)
Re:Mnemonic Devices (Score:2)
And then there's also Tom Lehrer's Periodic Table of the Elements song...
Re:Mnemonic Devices (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Mnemonic Devices (Score:3, Interesting)
I never learned the rhyme. What I learned was
1. Make a fist and look at the back of your hand.
2. Start with the knuckly on the left. That's elevated, so January has 31 days.
3. The gap between the first and second knuckles is recessed, so Feb. does not.
4. Continue like this until your last knuckle. Then start over again on the left. (July and August both have 31.)
Re:Mnemonic Devices (Score:2)
Re:Mnemonic Devices (Score:3, Funny)
No, no. Its, "Thirty days hath September. All the rest I can't remember."
Re:Mnemonic Devices (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Mnemonic Devices (Score:2)
Re:Mnemonic Devices (Score:2, Informative)
For the cards, for example, each card is associated with three things: a subject, a verb, and a direct object, I believe. You memorize a deck of cards by getting 3 cards at a time, and combining the subject for the first, verb of the second, and direct object of the third into a triplet. The actions and objects don't need to make senes; they just need to be memorable to you.
The order of the triplets is then memorize
Re:Mnemonic Devices (Score:5, Informative)
I've studied various mnemonic methods. The ancient greeks used an empty stadium as a mnemonic device then would 'seat' items to be remembered in the stadium seats.
Luria, A. R. (Aleksandr Romanovich) The Mind of a Mnemonist: A Little Book about a Vast Memory [nyu.edu]
Re:Mnemonic Devices (Score:2)
While it still surfaces from time to time (occasionally if we're out drinking), he's learned to keep recollections to the minimum when talking to people. It certainly doesn't hinder him socially (or anymore anyways)
One time, we saw this girl he went to grade school with. They started talking about it and before you k
How to Win the Memory Championship (Score:5, Interesting)
It was, in fact, written by the guy who won it, so he may know
what he's talking about.
http://www.slate.com/id/2114925/ [slate.com]
Re:How to Win the Memory Championship (Score:2)
There's a little bit about the history of memorizing in the article, and if you're looking for more on the topic, Frances Yates' [wikipedia.org] The Art of Memory [amazon.com] covers memorization from its mythical beginnings with Simonides, through its use by Roman orators, and ultimately its transformation into a mystical technique and occult science in the Middle Ages. Most of the techniques described in the article were practiced by the Romans.
My favorite memory Grandmaster is George Koltanowski [wikipedia.org]. He held the record for the most
Re:Mnemonic Devices (Score:3, Interesting)
One that I learned from a memory-enhancement tape was cool...you can memorize any sequence of numbers and attach that memory to any object (for instance, you could memorize everyone you know's address, b
Never forget (Score:2)
I remember a sci-fi story along those lines. Basically, the guy couldn't forget anything and it made his social life Hell because he was forever either creeping people out by remembering every detail abou
Re:Mnemonic Devices (Score:2)
I'm sure it helps you in school, what I want to know is how in the hell do you do that?
I believe the generic term for this sort of thing is Chunking [wikipedia.org]. Your short term memory is of a limited size, you can only keep track of so many things at once (most commonly you hear 7 +- 2 things).
Now those mnemonic devices are usually related with long term memory, not short term - I don't know if the method is even relevant for long term memory.
But the same goes for the article - they're doing short term memory tes
Re:Mnemonic Devices (Score:1)
Maybe the reason arbitrary devices work better is that there's no second-guessing? I'm absolutely certain that "30 days has September". So much of what we learn is uncertain, or has exceptions. When you can succinctly file away a piece of information you can be sure will always be valid, maybe the brain is better able to "paste" it, without having to add mechanisms for "unpasting" it if future information invalidates it.
Re:Mnemonic Devices (Score:2)
This is from a mnemonic for the 12 cranial nerves (Olfactory, Optic, Oculomotor, Trochlear, Trigeminal, Abducens, Facial, Auditory, Glossopharyngeal, Vagus, Spinal Accessory, Hypoglossal). The standard mnemonic is:
But I find this one even more memorable [pun intended]:
Re:Mnemonic Devices (Score:2)
Re:Mnemonic Devices (Score:2)
A deck of cards? That's it? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:A deck of cards? That's it? (Score:1)
Damn you...now I can't get it out of my head.
When the revolution comes, I'm locking you in a cell with Michael Stipe and a hundred rabid weasels on crank.
That's great (Score:1)
that's nice (Score:2, Funny)
Re:that's nice (Score:2, Funny)
Re:that's nice (Score:2)
I'll eat some Karma just to tell you how clever your sig is.
Now I'm playing a big Pink Floyd playlist...
1 Deck in 30 Seconds?! (Score:1)
Re:1 Deck in 30 Seconds?! (Score:3, Funny)
Look at the first card, say the name in your head. Look at the second, say the first and second. For every card, repeat the whole series. You develop a rythm and it almost becomes a song in your head. I tired and just got to 18 cards in 30 seconds that way.
I don't know if I could memorize an entire deck of cards in one sitting, though. If I could look through it for two or three minutes, w
Isn't this just... (Score:3, Insightful)
...a competition for people with eidetid memory [wikipedia.org]? It seems if you have a so-called photographic memory, then most of these feats would be child's play, I would think. There are some autisitc individuals who would find some of this trivial. It seems like fun and all that, but how about harnessing all that brain power to solving the world's problems instead of memorizing playing cards.
Re:Isn't this just... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Isn't this just... (Score:3, Interesting)
My memory is definately not photographic as in faces and landscapes, but is excellent at text, numbers and things that can be broken down as such, for example an UI or a roadmap. School was trivial with a me
Re:Isn't this just... (Score:2, Interesting)
His story is very interesting, and more than a little sad. After p
Have they been tested for cognition enhancers? (Score:2)
Another possibility is that competitors have worked out the best methodology for succeeding on these tests.
Jon Acheson
Multiplication tables (Score:2)
I continued to feel more or less the same until I was teaching algebra to college students, some of whom didn't know the multiplication tables.
Factoring an simple trinomial can be very difficult without basic single-digit multiplication tables at your immediate recall. Those that didn't memorize the multi
Re:Multiplication tables (Score:2)
I also find it interesting that it helps to memorize up to 12 x 12, as opposed to only going up to 10 x 10. I don't know why that is.
Re:Multiplication tables (Score:1)
Re:Multiplication tables (Score:2)
I was always amused, because they started us out with like, up to 6. I'd get about in the middle of the pack of the scores, and then they'd spring tables including 7's. I'd always be one of the first few done with those, if not the first. I could do the math. I never cared to just memorize bullshit until
Re:Multiplication tables (Score:2)
I didn't "memorize" the tables per se, but
Re:Multiplication tables (Score:2)
At age 13 I ran across a book called, "The Trachtenberg Speed System of Basic Mathematics" by Anne Cutler and Rudolf McShane. Within a couple of weeks I was doing complicated multiplication, division and square roots in my hea
Damn (Score:5, Funny)
Damn. I meant to tape that.
Re:Damn (Score:2, Funny)
Don't worry, I can recall every detail of it!
Eidetic memory - blessing or curse? (Score:1, Interesting)
He finds analytical problems difficult because his vivid memories get in the way. He also appears to be scattered but this is an illusion: he's merely more aware of the moment than a normal person is.
A deck of cards in 30 seconds... (Score:3, Funny)
Oh, you mean the order of the cards... On second thought.
Ooooh! (Score:1)