Memory Expert Answers Questions From Twitter | Tech Support | WIRED

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  • Опубликовано: 19 дек 2022
  • Nelson Dellis, five-time USA Memory Champion, answers the internet's burning questions about memory. How come it's easier to remember Taylor Swift lyrics than psychics formulas? How do you remember lines over night? Is there a correlation between exercise and memory? What is a memory palace? Nelson answers all these questions and much more!
    Check out Nelson's RUclips channel: / nelsondellis
    Director: Lisandro Perez-Rey
    Director of Photography: Ben Dewey
    Editor: Jeremy Smolik
    Expert: Nelson Dellis
    Line Producer: Joseph Buscemi
    Producer: Lisandro Perez-Rey
    Associate Producer: Samantha Vélez
    Associate Producer: Brandon White
    Production Manager: Eric Martinez
    Production Coordinator: Fernando Davila
    Camera Operator: Rahil Ashruff
    Sound: Jeff Gaumer
    Production Assistant: Patrick Sargent
    Post Production Supervisor: Alexa Deutsch
    Post Production Coordinator: Ian Bryant
    Supervising Editor: Doug Larsen
    Assistant Editor: Paul Tael
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Комментарии • 890

  • @NelsonDellis
    @NelsonDellis Год назад +3538

    Thanks WIRED for having me on this episode! Enjoy!

    • @toomanycamilas
      @toomanycamilas Год назад +13

      Why the headphones?? I looved this episode btw😊

    • @ViliamF.
      @ViliamF. Год назад +28

      @@toomanycamilas Either noise cancelling or simply sound isolating, to remove distractions for better concentration.

    • @infinitemonkey917
      @infinitemonkey917 Год назад +3

      Do people attempt to enhance themselves with nootropic drugs at memory competitions ?

    • @NelsonDellis
      @NelsonDellis Год назад +13

      @@toomanycamilas yes! Those are noise defending headphones (increases concentration at competitions)

    • @NelsonDellis
      @NelsonDellis Год назад +9

      @@infinitemonkey917 not that I know of…yet, anyways

  • @jopo7996
    @jopo7996 Год назад +8384

    It would have been great if he introduced himself as "the 4 time memory champion, no wait, 5 time."

  • @oduckett
    @oduckett Год назад +945

    Nelson: Sleep is super important for memory
    Me, at 1:05 AM: ok, ok, I get it

    • @lola9425
      @lola9425 Год назад +10

      I just happen to read your message and i checked the hour to find it 01:05

    • @MariTiyana
      @MariTiyana 11 месяцев назад +7

      me at 3:09 am😭

    • @adhdhamster
      @adhdhamster 11 месяцев назад

      Me currently at almost 2am 🥲😂

    • @soulbender2727
      @soulbender2727 9 месяцев назад +4

      Me at 5 am😅

    • @aozora21
      @aozora21 2 месяца назад

      Me at 2am

  • @Omar-wq9dz
    @Omar-wq9dz Год назад +3704

    I've never heard of a memory champion or coach before. I like how Wired can find experts at topics nobody really knows or thinks about

    • @Kevin-rg7kl
      @Kevin-rg7kl Год назад +297

      Maybe you'd heard of it before but just forgot

    • @oguilglez
      @oguilglez Год назад +4

      honestly, same.

    • @Not_Info
      @Not_Info Год назад +37

      There's an incredible book about a Journalist who reported about a championship, got hooked and literally ended up winning next year's memory championship. It's called 'Moonwalking with Einstein'.
      I highly recommend it

    • @parafraceren
      @parafraceren Год назад +16

      With nobody, you just mean yourself, right?

    • @Omar-wq9dz
      @Omar-wq9dz Год назад +5

      @@parafraceren no, I mean a majority of people

  • @taldarim928
    @taldarim928 Год назад +1391

    I love how he just doesn't answer questions but gives us little presentation of more or less each question. I would definitely want to see more of this guy! 😊

    • @moaiadaljamal4422
      @moaiadaljamal4422 Год назад +4

      Not to be racist or anything, but you are by far the best race in SC2

    • @alexterieur8813
      @alexterieur8813 3 месяца назад

      i also want to see more of this guy…

    • @AnimeSunglasses
      @AnimeSunglasses Месяц назад +1

      Especially talking about sour cream filled bananas. That's terrific enough to be VERY memorable!

  • @mickcollins1921
    @mickcollins1921 10 месяцев назад +337

    I love how he answered questions in a way that made us more likely to retain the info. He knows that just saying words won't yield much retention, but pictures and stories will last longer in our memories and will link us to the information he was trying to impart.
    Well played, memory guy.

  • @Paytonrifley
    @Paytonrifley Год назад +638

    I used to doodle a lot in class and during lectures and lessons, I got in trouble for it a lot. When I topk tests I would rememeber what I had drawn on certain pages of my notes and immediately would recall what my teacher was talking about while I was doodling that thing, and often remember the answer. Super weird 😂

    • @famof4392
      @famof4392 Год назад +33

      I totally do that too. It works!

    • @hgoodin1013
      @hgoodin1013 Год назад +22

      Yes! Me too! I'm in my 50s and I can STILL see/remember some of my college notes.

    • @ninety12
      @ninety12 11 месяцев назад +14

      It's called mind mapping look it up I use it's great! 😊 👍

    • @LouiseHultcrantz
      @LouiseHultcrantz 10 месяцев назад +8

      I'll try to think of that next time I see a friend or maybe a future child doing that and not just think that they're not paying attention because I've never really thought of it that way 😊

    • @ajithadrian7137
      @ajithadrian7137 9 месяцев назад

      So you are somehow a memory expert yourselves??lol

  • @davidfadul6239
    @davidfadul6239 Год назад +887

    If this guy forgets your name then you know he did it on purpose 😂

  • @bushidobrown6742
    @bushidobrown6742 Год назад +205

    "Bear Grylls peeing on a thong in your highschool bedroom" isnt a sentence I thought I'd ever hear

    • @paokole2
      @paokole2 Год назад +17

      Not the first time Bear Grylls is associated with pee..

    • @zoeydeu2261
      @zoeydeu2261 Год назад +1

      Be glad it wasn't Bear Grylls urinating onto you or drinking his own pee 🤣

  • @shadowslashful
    @shadowslashful Год назад +850

    I was so confused about the memory palace thing until he did the example with the countries and I'm 99% sure I can recall that at any time now! So helpful, def using that!

    • @Octopussyist
      @Octopussyist Год назад +1

      The memory palace is popuar among card counters at the Black Jack table.

    • @reelgesh51
      @reelgesh51 Год назад +19

      So how does one create a memory palace if they have no visual thoughts - which some peoples have
      Or if they have visual memory but can't visualiser - which again is a known condition, I wish he covered that

    • @mathistruth9105
      @mathistruth9105 Год назад +3

      @@Octopussyist Don't casinos have a way to counter that nowadays?

    • @alexanderabrashev1366
      @alexanderabrashev1366 Год назад +3

      I don't believe in you

    • @CZProtton
      @CZProtton Год назад +17

      @@mathistruth9105 There is no way to counter that. What they do is watch the tables and if someone is winning too much, they talk about it and if they think the person counts, they ban him for life. So probably some really good counters can still do it for basically infinite money, if they make sure to not win too often and too much to give themselves away.

  • @TonyP_Yes-its-Me
    @TonyP_Yes-its-Me Месяц назад +15

    My memory is terrible, so I started watching this, and then I realized that I had already seen it, and forgotten.

    • @YuBeace
      @YuBeace 5 дней назад +1

      I have this with so many Tech Support videos, maybe it has to do with the fact that most of us watch them at 1 am while drowsy. 😂

  • @jaredwalpole3148
    @jaredwalpole3148 Год назад +292

    I loved this episode. I didn't realize I was unconsciously doing a lot of these already. My go to method for acing tests in school was to study using spaced repetition or interleaving but while I was studying I would listen to the same song on repeat. Then when I needed to recall everything I was studying I would just sing the song in my head and I could recall almost everything, a lot of times the pages eidetically.

    • @marslara
      @marslara Год назад +9

      That's so interesting, I've heard of memory palaces before but not people using something like a song, though I guess it works pretty similarly if you think about it.
      I was given the tip once to imagine a story including the things you want to remember as it's easier to remember sequential things that build off each other

    • @_butter.cup_
      @_butter.cup_ 12 дней назад

      happens to me too omg

    • @Samantha-vlly
      @Samantha-vlly 11 дней назад

      My Biology teacher and top 1 in class do this technique, and now watching this, fully convince now.
      Just need to have good night sleep and moving to start up.
      I want now to try this in random day.

  • @duststorm10
    @duststorm10 6 месяцев назад +25

    In high school I used to draw in every class, and most of the teachers overlooked it because while I draw, I listen. When the tests came around, I always associated the lesson with the part of the drawing that I had been working on at the time, and it was simple enough that I was a straight-A student without studying.

  • @brettturner5299
    @brettturner5299 Год назад +268

    Yep, linking totally works. Many years ago I used linking to pass the knowledge test to be a taxi driver. To pass the test I was given a long, random list of streets in my town and I had to remember an adjoining one for each. Pass mark was something like 90%. I learned the whole A-Z in two weeks and passed first time which was unheard of. I have a totally average memory. It's a brilliant way to learn long lists and I still use it to this day. (PS Probably fortunately for everyone I never became a taxi driver, I drove one limo for a school prom and decided it wasn't for me!)

    • @NydTheKraken
      @NydTheKraken Год назад +24

      Well even if you didn’t become a taxi driver in the end I bet you know your way around your city perfectly now so that’s pretty cool too! :)

    • @unlimiteddd
      @unlimiteddd Год назад +10

      Cool example! Was testing in my young days a book on memory with theses techniques, and to see if it was effective i retained a 100 digits number for a week. I was amazed at how easy it was (and first time the charm!).
      I knew my memory wasn't weak because some things were memorized very easily forever, but others forgotten very fast (a few minutes lol)... It was a case of "highly selective memory", so i couldn't remember naturally things that don't interest me (i have some visual list for that nowadays! hahaha)

    • @BlitzkriegBryce
      @BlitzkriegBryce 11 месяцев назад +3

      When I was a kid, I had a picture book that taught a linking method with all the US presidents (at the time). For example, George Washington had a washing machine then for John Adams, the washing machine was filled with large atoms. Still stuck in my brain over 30 years later.

  • @Eline_Meijer
    @Eline_Meijer 5 месяцев назад +90

    What he said? I forgot

  • @khalilahd.
    @khalilahd. Год назад +337

    As someone trying to learn a new language (Japanese) this was actually so helpful. Definitely taking notes 🙏🏽

    • @dustintravis8791
      @dustintravis8791 Год назад +22

      ganbare!

    • @Octopussyist
      @Octopussyist Год назад +8

      Rule no. 1: Stop saying you are trying to learn ... "I tried to open the door", basically means "I could not open the door". So saying this is programming yourself to not succeeding.
      Rule no 2.: You are learning another language!
      His method of connecting words with little scenarios is recommendable when learning vocabulary. The most efficient is when your scenario meets these three criteria: It describes the meaning of the word - it gives you some hint of the sound of the word - it is so ridiculous or spectacular that there is no way you can forget it.
      Example:
      Railway station = eki (you probably already know - but it is just an example)
      Scenario: You are at the railway station, stumble and bump into something, resulting in the sign with the name of the station falling down in front of an oncoming train, being pushed in front of it making a skreeching sound like - ..kiiiiii
      It takes some time and creativity, but once you get the habit of inventing these scenarios there is almost no limit to what you can memorize.

    • @juckasjarvi
      @juckasjarvi Год назад +17

      There's an app called anki i can highly recommend. Its like flashcards in your phone that pop up at different intervalls depending on how difficult you think the words are. So it helps with spaced repetition that he also mentioned in the video is good for long term memory. Been using it myself to memorize japanese and i find it very useful ^^

    • @lowgpu1687
      @lowgpu1687 Год назад

      @@Octopussyist Rule no.1 has a problem, if you say you know japanese the person might start speaking japanese, if you don't understand you look like a liar and an idiot

    • @itsafunnyoldworld
      @itsafunnyoldworld Год назад +6

      I'm learning Thai - I find it's easier to remember if I can grasp familiarity with my native English.
      Many words in Thai sound EXACTLY like an English word (though completely not the same word AT ALL)
      Examples:
      Bid = open
      Bit = close
      Toe = table
      Kit = think
      Do = look
      Ow = want/take
      Long = down
      Bye = go
      Non = sleep
      Words on the left is how I imagine them being phonetically written in English, words on the right are the actual meaning in English. I also found it easier once I had grasped sentence structure which is pretty much the same as in English - subject, verb, object - adjectives are like Spanish and go after the noun, adverbs tend to go at the end etc.

  • @mastod0n1
    @mastod0n1 19 дней назад +4

    2:29 in the restaurant industry I've heard this called walk-in syndrome. Because as soon as you go into the walk-in cooler you forget what you went there for in the first place. Happens multiple times a day to multiple people in restaurants.

  • @johnnelson5503
    @johnnelson5503 8 месяцев назад +115

    WTF is up with everyone starting their question with "WTF"?

    • @idk9594
      @idk9594 13 дней назад +3

      Hahaha.

  • @mathddv
    @mathddv Год назад +31

    I love mnemonics, i struggled to learn the bones of the wrist but then i heard the phrase "Shy Lovers Try Positions That They Can't Handle" and i never forgot (Scaphoid, Lunatum/Lunar bone, Triquetrum, Pisiform, Trapeze, Trapezoïd, Capitatum, Hamatum)

  • @ChristophGangrel
    @ChristophGangrel Год назад +103

    Here's a interesting trick to study for your test or exam... First check if your teacher or whoever wont have anything against you chewing gum during the exam... And the trick is to chew it during studing and tahn chew it while taking the exam... Its best to chose gum with distinc falvour and smell. It basicly uses what he mentioned about smell and worked like charm for me back in the day...

    • @Chocobohunter
      @Chocobohunter Год назад +12

      I guess your spelling memory isn’t that good

  • @Sharky857
    @Sharky857 Год назад +151

    I personally felt some of those questions.
    Like, in high school I had a similar issue to the one who asked how is it possible to memorise song lyrics so perfectly but not physics formulas. I remember I was struggling with understanding biology as a whole subject, but I was also determined to try and get better grades. At that time I was also an avid bookworm for novels, and I started to wonder how come I could still remember perfectly a novel I read even 3-4 years prior (and only that once), but not what our teacher explained merely 2 days before. I came to realise that, when reading something fictional, I tended to imagine (visualise) the scenes and dialogues in my head -(I guess this is what pretty much everyone else does too)-
    So I started to study by reading notes and text books as if I were reading the plot of a fictional novel. My grades did improve significantly afterwards. 🤯

    • @duzehalo
      @duzehalo Год назад +12

      I hacked my high school learning almost the same way! Everything I was reading and studying I would immediately implant into scenarios in my head - and since I wanted to become a doctor, it was almost always a patient with an ailment of sorts (for all sciences classes), or the patient themselves was famous or participated in an important event (for history and literature classes). Some things I remember to this day, together with their "patients" 😅

    • @bishiw2949
      @bishiw2949 Год назад +11

      Sometimes, I would watch videos related to history to improve my visualization on specific events while studying the subject. I paired this with reconstructing back my History notes into something more visually attractive than long paragraphs on textbooks. It was a fun study time, watching historical characters coming to life in Oversimplified videos and cramping notes into big mind maps with highlighters and pens.

  • @WeabooMilk
    @WeabooMilk Год назад +196

    That last username was great, 10/10, he didn't even question it

    • @carenmontgomery2384
      @carenmontgomery2384 Год назад +12

      I would have liked to hear what sort of things he remembered for some of the faces to give me more ideas.
      I recently met a person named Katelyn-- I (try) to think of my neice Kate...then my middle name
      Lyn.

    • @jude7365
      @jude7365 Год назад +3

      @@carenmontgomery2384 we dont care??

    • @TheBryceholden
      @TheBryceholden Год назад +16

      @@jude7365 na it was pretty interesting

    • @leevancliffneridacampo7769
      @leevancliffneridacampo7769 Год назад +1

      Aphrodite?! 🧐🤔

    • @noahve
      @noahve Год назад

      @@leevancliffneridacampo7769 @BipolarBearDick

  • @andvan5171
    @andvan5171 8 месяцев назад +4

    Essentially, you emotionally prioritize memories because they are personally meaningful.

  • @mikotagayuna8494
    @mikotagayuna8494 Год назад +30

    Schoolteachers tend to be very good at remembering your names because they tend to process your presence in the form of a seat plan's grid. I remeber being greeted by one of my former elementary school teachers who knew my name decades later and promptly embarassing myself trying to remember hers.

    • @greenLimeila
      @greenLimeila 10 месяцев назад

      I'm sure she remembered where you sat too, for sure

  • @Greystorm1619
    @Greystorm1619 Год назад +17

    Him memorizing all the names at the end was amazing. Just the anticipation of seeing if the name underneath is what he said, and whether he'll get through them all. Also the sound of the velcro detaching was super satisfying, could be in an unintentional ASMR video lol

  • @dymardo_
    @dymardo_ Год назад +26

    I was visiting my hometown in Ukraine, and I went to a local bar. Met a girl there, who had a bright ultraviolet light behind her on the wall. Her name was Violeta. This was in 2017.

    • @maskboy2743
      @maskboy2743 13 дней назад

      okay but what did you eat for breakfast yesterday

  • @MSsix6
    @MSsix6 Год назад +28

    What really helps me to remember what I study and get good grades, is that I always make sure that I understand what I'm reading. If there's a word I'm not sure of, I look it up, if it's a function or whatever it could be, read up a bit on it and go back to the text and make sense of what is written. It can be tedious, but well worth it. Really understanding what I'm learning helps, not only short term, but long term as well. Good way of checking yourself, is to try to explain what you´ve learned. Can you explain it in a simple manner and can you remember the more advanced bits.

  • @jacquelyntee
    @jacquelyntee Год назад +151

    I've heard about (and experienced) the forgetting stuff when walking into a room thing. But I also experience something similar that I haven't heard anyone talk about. If I'm lying down on my right side and thinking about something, then roll over to my left side, I almost always forget what I was thinking of. If I roll back to my right side I can usually remember it again (same for reverse). Curious if anyone else here has that happen, or knows why it occurs?

    • @ecokrazy
      @ecokrazy Год назад +9

      That happens to me when I'm falling asleep. Not sure why it happens

    • @hanzomain4681
      @hanzomain4681 Год назад +21

      This happens to me too, I reckon it's about recreating the conditions that caused me to think of the thing in the first place.

    • @11StarlingA
      @11StarlingA Год назад +17

      Memory is linked to many things, specifically your environment. Hence why a certain smell can “take you back” to a different time or feeling. Same with general things. Lying on your left side, there was a certain feeling or line of sight that is connected to that thought. Flipping over to your right changes the course of what is being processed in the mind and via your senses. Returning to the left side and all of the senses that were linked to the fleeting thought, can bring it back to the forefront because your brain ties the physical setting to that memory.

    • @drankto
      @drankto Год назад +1

      @@crazyg2269 that theory of left vs right brain was debunked years ago. This scenario deals with memory being associated with specific environments.

    • @gnarthdarkanen7464
      @gnarthdarkanen7464 Год назад +5

      I'd suggest quietly, that it's very similar (possibly linked?) to forgetting because you walked through a door, or when opening the fridge...
      If you listened to the video, specifically "Memory is linked to an event threshold"... That's not just the threshold in a doorway. It's about the EVENT, itself, involved in your memory... A single memory links to a single event, so you're thinking of it on your left side, then you roll over, and now that you're laying on your right side, the rollover is the threshold between laying on your left and then laying on your right...
      It's just theorizing at this point... BUT unless you've got particular other stimuli involved, whether it's laying on a couch so only on one side do you face the back cushions and smell their particular smell, versus the rest of the room when you roll over, there isn't a lot of other information involved in changing your brain's activity or disrupting whatever you're thinking about before the rollover...
      Not a neurology expert, of course... JUST taking what was said in the video and making sense of it here...
      The point is that the term was EVENT threshold, so it can be all kinds of things... nearly any change in activity or circumstance to that activity. ;o)

  • @PetKatFizz
    @PetKatFizz Год назад +20

    Most of the techniques involved visualisation. Would love to hear alternatives for people with aphantasia.

  • @jameswright5627
    @jameswright5627 Год назад +1

    @Wired, thank you for post this video featuring Nelson Dellis, he's one of my favorite memory experts.

  • @ruffsnap
    @ruffsnap Год назад +9

    I think some people just naturally have a knack for this kind of stuff.
    At 4:27 with the 5-item grocery list, I've heard before of people using stories to remember each item, or even assigning a different word based on each first letter and things like that, but honestly I'd forget the order of the story, parts of the story, etc. I'd really have to sit and run it over and over and over in my brain. And with a 5 item list, it'd honestly just be easier for me to remember the 5 words.

    • @quantquill
      @quantquill 4 месяца назад +3

      My partner thought the same thing when I told him about this video. Then I told him the story about asparagus stabbing the bread, revealing the banana which when peeled splooshed sour cream into my mug of coffee beans. He then recited back not just the list but the story. The expression on his face... 😂

  • @sinosakambana
    @sinosakambana Год назад +9

    That physical map technique is literally gold. Oh my days

  • @gostovahs8121
    @gostovahs8121 Год назад +52

    awesome -- also I want him to post a google spreadsheet with each person, action, and thing he has associated with every card

    • @mathistruth9105
      @mathistruth9105 Год назад +2

      You know there are other systems you can use if you struggle remembering celebrities visually.

    • @quantquill
      @quantquill 4 месяца назад +1

      Easier if you come up with the associations yourself so they are personally meaningful. Remember how he said the 8 of Clubs (or Spades? Lol) is Bear Grylls and he can't even remember why? It was something that mattered at one point to him. That little bit of a hook is what helps us remember. For example, for me the 10 of Spades would be my friend, Tony, who bowls so many strikes in a row at our amateur bowling games we had to give him a handicap. 😅 Of course, then I can't use it to mean a strike at bowling since then I'd get confused when trying to remember a three card story (person action object). That's actually a really good prompt for a tarot spread. Hm.

  • @petra_fine
    @petra_fine Год назад +5

    I remember lists by making up a fun story around them. I then repeat that story atleast 7 times. Works every time.

  • @isabelletea5177
    @isabelletea5177 Год назад +17

    This is fascinating and a “ memory palace” seems like a neat idea until I'm trying to remember why I keep picturing a soccer ball with headphones stuck on it.

  • @Mor_timer
    @Mor_timer 11 месяцев назад +3

    Memory is such a fascinating concept.. I was basically drooling at this guy’s genius

  • @davidanderson4543
    @davidanderson4543 Год назад +6

    That fact about higher adrenaline is interesting when you put it up against the thought that when people are at a crime they have a hard time remembering all the details

  • @Ikari1212
    @Ikari1212 Год назад +15

    So to memorize a 52-card deck, I have to memorize 52 Persons, Actions and Objects associated with those cards first. And then I have to think of 18 "Memory Palaces". Which I also have to remember the order of. But then I can do it! Then I can remember a deck of cards. :d Still pretty impressive.

  • @IsabellaRollim
    @IsabellaRollim Год назад +115

    I used to have a crazy good memory until around 6 years ago, then after some traumas I started to feel a very big difference. Now I don't remember things as easily as I did then - still have a pretty good memory, but definitely lost most of my ability to remember stuff

    • @3n3j0t4
      @3n3j0t4 Год назад

      did u have a eidetic memory prior

    • @emilysmith2965
      @emilysmith2965 Год назад +8

      Trauma definitely affects memory. Eidetic memory tends to fade with age, not trauma. Memory loss in response to trauma is the brain’s attempt to protect itself.

    • @IsabellaRollim
      @IsabellaRollim Год назад

      @@3n3j0t4 I don't know if it could be considered eidetic memory, but it was really good and very precise back then

    • @jenm1
      @jenm1 Год назад

      It’s normal for getting older

  • @nafyne
    @nafyne 11 месяцев назад +2

    Really glad someone asked the question about mnemonics and equally glad for the answer. That was one of my biggest problems up to highschool was teachers heavily suggesting I use mnemonics when I could more easily recall the original phrase/list. Its quite possible I just have yet to find a proper way of nailing mnemonics in my brain and it would be extremely helpful to me, I’m certainly always going to be open to exploring.

  • @akiraigarashi2874
    @akiraigarashi2874 Год назад +1

    He explains concepts really nicely

  • @r4lara
    @r4lara 10 месяцев назад

    The way this man’s brain works is amazing. Def jumped to the bench of my dream rotation

  • @GameOverFiles
    @GameOverFiles Год назад +8

    I often get tip of the tongue (also known as lethologica) phenomenon. Where people often recall one or more features of the target word, such as the first letter, its syllabic stress, and words similar in sound and/or meaning. I always say "it starts with a c.. what's the word? It means like other people can catch the sickness"

    • @scottdavie7057
      @scottdavie7057 Год назад +1

      I do this all the time to my mom, half the time I'm not sure the word actually exists, and I might throw up to 3 possible starting letters at her XD One time she asked for help figuring out a word and we couldn't get it. It was "comfort food", which I never would have figured out because it's two words :]

  • @Samantha-vlly
    @Samantha-vlly 11 дней назад +1

    When I think of “thinking” I instantly thought about school lessons and kinda drained me already lol
    I feel like someone influencing you and what you engage can also affect your process. What just I shared is the influence I have in my mind, so I need to alter that mindset and replace it with healthy stuff.
    Never encounter a lot about getting immersed with “warm up” first before starting. Might just get you not far enough of what goal you want.

  • @tsunamininja
    @tsunamininja Год назад +198

    Surprised nobody asked the question, "how do you forget memories you want to forget?"

    • @Tibovl
      @Tibovl Год назад +34

      Wanna know the answer? We can't, not really. But we can actually trick our brain into believing something else is true. Alter the truth, lie to yourself and it will become the truth over time.

    • @quanhoangclarinettist6225
      @quanhoangclarinettist6225 Год назад +22

      This question can be surprisingly painful when you think about it.

    • @angel_withaflamethrower
      @angel_withaflamethrower Год назад

      amnestics don't exist

    • @daniela2994
      @daniela2994 11 месяцев назад +12

      I actually did this one time. I was so utterly embarrassed by something that happened that I told myself repeatedly: "this didn't happen, this didn't happen, this didn't happen" and didn't allow myself to think about what happened. I would just repeat that sentence over and over and so I forgot what happened. To this day I don't know what it was because I forced myself to forget it, I only know it was very embarrassing to me

    • @mrglowtm
      @mrglowtm 10 месяцев назад +1

      Therapy

  • @bleuumscarlett7977
    @bleuumscarlett7977 Год назад +15

    Another way I learned to remember peoples' names when meeting them is simply to repeat it after they introduce themselves. Like "hi, i'm Alex" "Hi Alex, i'm Sarah" "hello Sarah. Nice to meet you too." Or something. Just make sure you repeat it early in the conversation, 1) it'll be less awkward to use it later and 2) if you misunderstood the name, you're corrected straight away

  • @jarbincks6715
    @jarbincks6715 Месяц назад

    I'm a memory researcher and it feels so good to understand everything hes talking sbout

  • @ihtesham_emon
    @ihtesham_emon Год назад +1

    Wow! This is the best Q&A session that wired done yet! ❤️

  • @s1x6x1s
    @s1x6x1s Год назад +5

    15:03 i figured out the "3 ways to memorize for a test" in high school simply through experimentation. well, 2 ways really-i skipped the 3rd one (to actually try to recall what i studied). my interweaving was not studying something else, but rather doing something mundane like listening to music or reading a magazine/comics. it was quite effective.

  • @l.a.9406
    @l.a.9406 10 месяцев назад

    Amazing! Thank you for all the techniques 😀

  • @jo_jo_jo
    @jo_jo_jo Год назад +6

    I read tarot and I have problems associating many of the cards with their meaning. Definitely, I'm gonna try some of these tricks, so I don't have to go back and forth to the manual and consult what each card means. Thanks!

  • @Maeshalanadae
    @Maeshalanadae Год назад

    The one thing that put us ahead of other species is our pattern recognition ability coupled with our sense of wonderment and our skill in the 1-2-3 linear connection. Those factors together have is ask “what if I do this?” Or “what if this happens?” to combine with cause and effect for repetition.

  • @kaitlynmaschhoff344
    @kaitlynmaschhoff344 Год назад +4

    The first letter trick really works, I used it to memorize a monologue

  • @michaelknight2342
    @michaelknight2342 Год назад +4

    That was amazing!!

  • @robinshishido3510
    @robinshishido3510 4 месяца назад

    Loved this!! Would be great to do another video.

  • @famailiaanima
    @famailiaanima 10 месяцев назад

    Throughout a year I did spaced repetition for a university entrance exam and it worked so well!

  • @superguyrichard
    @superguyrichard Год назад +17

    first question. does sleep affect memory.
    answer, Yes sleep is important.
    Me at 3 in the morning: oh wow, yeah, I guess I should just get off of this and go to bed, I can't even correctly remember the question or the answer. thanks memory guy who had a name

  • @craigmartinez7227
    @craigmartinez7227 Год назад

    thank you very much for sharing your techniques. Was very helpful.

  • @alaletaief4016
    @alaletaief4016 11 месяцев назад

    i needed this guy 5 years ago

  • @julianebeda5643
    @julianebeda5643 Год назад

    I just love watching videos abt memory, and definitely wanna lear more abt it, so tks!!

  • @phunkymind23
    @phunkymind23 Год назад +2

    I have a scar on my temporal lobe, which causes me to obsess over my memories until I know them by heart. I love making memory videos for lists of things. My most recent one is the Booker Prize winners. I've found that the more random and odd the videos are, the more likely you remember them.

  • @s0phian0va
    @s0phian0va Год назад +2

    Thank you this was awesome

  • @himanshi777
    @himanshi777 Год назад +40

    I am having a test tomorrow 😂,what a video to watch...thanks wired

  • @bellaw.7678
    @bellaw.7678 6 месяцев назад

    I love the level of imagination you can use to help recall memories.

  • @aveator7723
    @aveator7723 Год назад +15

    I find it funny he can remember that bear grillis is the 8 of clubs but cant remember why that is. Also stumbling over some of the names. Gives me comfort that a 5 time memory champ still slips up :D

    • @scottdavie7057
      @scottdavie7057 Год назад +5

      I don't really know him, but for me it would be 8 = B, and clubs looks like a clover leaf, so nature

  • @pratyasha279
    @pratyasha279 23 дня назад

    Omg I looove memory palaces - they literally help me revise and recall essayss

  • @lanzcordero2132
    @lanzcordero2132 Год назад +12

    A perfect timing for my cognitive psych class.

  • @Orrinn123
    @Orrinn123 Год назад +12

    9:50 So to answer this question for real instead of just saying “because that’s how it is”.
    Bad memories are usually mistakes, your brain knows when you make mistakes and wants to keep a record of all your mistakes so that when you get into a similar situation in the future your brain can recall that memory in order to avoid doing that particular mistake again.
    This is the basis of how all learning works

  • @AndyChamberlainMusic
    @AndyChamberlainMusic Год назад +3

    very cool fun fact about smell being evolutionarily older and therefore bypassing the thalamus and that being why smell memories are so immediate

  • @space_cadet6
    @space_cadet6 Год назад +3

    Does anyone else find it satisfying how his shirt, brain model, rubik's cube tiles and his eyes are all the same blue?

  • @AprilMoop-ly6rw
    @AprilMoop-ly6rw 10 месяцев назад

    The best one I've find so far.

  • @mbmenahem24
    @mbmenahem24 Год назад

    One of the most interesting videos I’ve seen in a long time

  • @maxdaisukeschlautmann8095
    @maxdaisukeschlautmann8095 9 месяцев назад

    These are really informative things, that should be teached at school

  • @mortcog4767
    @mortcog4767 Год назад +3

    The picture name thing was nice, I'd like to have seen him name them off a second board with the pictured arranged in a random order to prove he linked the name to the face, not just memorized the order.

  • @strvngewxrld
    @strvngewxrld Год назад

    This was so awesome!

  • @semoremo9548
    @semoremo9548 Год назад

    Nothing beats watching this video while I'm suposed to be studying for my finals

  • @Hauptstufe
    @Hauptstufe Год назад

    I loved this.

  • @ulalaFrugilega
    @ulalaFrugilega 4 месяца назад

    Brilliant episode, thx!

  • @TheZotmeister
    @TheZotmeister 18 дней назад

    2:52 This one speaks to me, and I have some personal experience with it: the reason I memorized pi to (exactly) 62 decimal places is the Hard 'n Phirm song "Pi", where that's the chorus!

  • @Erika115101
    @Erika115101 9 месяцев назад

    Love this man

  • @niletajuknaite
    @niletajuknaite Год назад +16

    can we just appreciate how he solved a rubik's cube blindfolded?!!!

  • @unclesamzbastardsonu.s.b.s9315
    @unclesamzbastardsonu.s.b.s9315 9 месяцев назад +2

    The rubiks cube while blindfolded technique made me realize I not only have a crappy memory, I'm dumb af too.

  • @mariammkrey190
    @mariammkrey190 17 дней назад

    5:02 thats a really good one, thank u

  • @RyanWeerasinghe
    @RyanWeerasinghe 15 дней назад

    Very Useful.. Thank you very much..

  • @sragvi6484
    @sragvi6484 10 месяцев назад

    he has a book! it’s really fun and easy to understand i love it

  • @puggynugz922
    @puggynugz922 Год назад +1

    I used the memorization trick to remember Jane Austen books, making the nonsensical word SNEPP, for Sense and Sensibility, Northanger Abbey, Emma, Pride and Prejudice, and Persuasion.
    I would do the same for a small grocery list if I didn't have a List App on my phone. I also repeat something three times to help recall it or say it over and over walking to the next room.

  • @eliseihle4574
    @eliseihle4574 9 месяцев назад

    Thank you for the name tip! As someone who has face blindness i tried for years to associate people with a defining feature and ended up reverting to either their coat or car (im brilliant at remembering cars! 🤷‍♀️) problems happen when people buy new coats and cars though! Im going to try this tip to remember now 😊

  • @cvrlop
    @cvrlop Год назад +6

    so Michael Scott was right about how to remember names!

  • @nviscallin3702
    @nviscallin3702 Год назад

    Love this video, inspired me to be more creative when studying. It's a shame my alevels are next week.

  • @avipshasengupta6112
    @avipshasengupta6112 Год назад

    The first letter method totally works!

  • @MatthewLenton
    @MatthewLenton Год назад +2

    The memory trick where you visualise in your head is fine for most people, but I have Aphantasia and so have no visualisation skills. I have to remember things differently

  • @Tobberoth
    @Tobberoth 9 месяцев назад +3

    As for the password, you are far better off using the whole sentence than the initial letters since the password becomes too short, making it easier to brute force. Longer passwords = more entropy = harder to crack. An 8 character password can be bruteforced in less than a week even if theres numbers and special characters, while a similar but 12 character password will take tens or even a hundred thousand years to bruteforce.

  • @MarieCadoret
    @MarieCadoret Год назад +57

    "When you use mnemonics and the proper technique, you're taking advantage of things that our brains are really good at, namely thinking in pictures."
    * cries in aphantasia *
    I hope you'll invite Nelson Dellis another time, because this was super interesting!

    • @toddlisasmith9512
      @toddlisasmith9512 Год назад +7

      I was so hoping someone would point this out. So much of this relies on seeing images in your mind that I gave up on this video halfway through.

    • @biazacha
      @biazacha Год назад +10

      Something that could be a good substitute is the Taylor question; if you make rhythmic connections between words or simply using rimes, that could be a good memory exercise.

    • @miha3847
      @miha3847 Год назад

      Same 😢

    • @gtens
      @gtens Год назад +1

      No joke. Really used to think that Mind Palace and other such mnemonics were only meant for utter geniuses because I was so poor at visualisation.

  • @musicfever5921
    @musicfever5921 Год назад +1

    such an inspiring episode :)

  • @LK-3000
    @LK-3000 8 месяцев назад +1

    I use the memory palace for lists and I have many different locations to use in my memory. But I'm running out of locations that I have a good recall of. Do you have different layers of things in the locations you use for the memory palace technique? Or do you just pick a different location for things you need to keep in your memory over time? I hope this question isn't too confusing.

  • @millienexu5684
    @millienexu5684 11 месяцев назад

    WHOA this episode was so so helpful, I’ll def remember (😉) it!!

  • @Gmshep717LP
    @Gmshep717LP Год назад +1

    I’m in pharmacy school and when I’m studying drug names I teleport my mind back to my first pharmacy job and look thru the shelves of drugs, so cool that technique has a name (memory palace)

  • @miguelbest5703
    @miguelbest5703 11 месяцев назад +2

    Nice to see Michael Scott's method of memorizing people's names being used by a five-time USA Memory Champion!

  • @DuranmanX
    @DuranmanX Год назад +9

    I'm going to forget all this

  • @Sevem7m
    @Sevem7m Год назад

    Wow these are some really good techniques!