The significance of a rise in serum αFP
I think that's mainly an example where it's not straightforward to make good cards.
Basically I would get a list that rise in serum αFP does X, Y and Z. Then I would make cards:
Does higher or lower serum αFP does X?
Does higher or lower serum αFP does Y?
Does higher or lower serum αFP does Z?
I personally formulate the cards a bit differently but that's the core.
Ven diagrams/etc, to compare and contrast similar lists. (This is more specific to medical school, when you learn subtly different diseases.)
I do have Anki cards that contain Ven diagrams. At the beginning the Ven diagram is shown empty and the user is asked where a given item belongs on the Ven diagram.
As answer card the whole Ven diagram is shown and the item that the user had to place is highlited with a special color. I haven't yet automated the production of such Ven diagrams but I think that's part of the future of Spaced Repetition Learning.
Your mileage may vary, but after seeing so many people try and reject them, I figured it was enough data to share. Mnemonic pictures and memory palaces are slightly time consuming when you're learning them.
If you want to learn information the day before a test and get a good score then Anki won't help you for that purpose. That's not what it's made for. Anki exists to prevent you from forgetting information. There a good chance that you will forget your memory palace information in a year. Especially because memory palaces have a reuse problem. If you use the same palace for multiple lists you get conflicts.
Your mileage may vary, but after seeing so many people try and reject them, I figured it was enough data to share.
I would guess most of those people violate various of Wozniaks rules. If I look at the most popular Anki deck about medicine that's on Anki shared deck list I fully understand that learning that way isn't optimal.
I would guess most of those people violate various of Wozniaks rules. If I look at the most popular Anki deck about medicine that's on Anki shared deck list I fully understand that learning that way isn't optimal.
That's a good point; I'm frequently frustrated by existing decks because they tend to include too much information in the answer, or not use as many cues as they could, or not repeat themselves as much, etc. A lot of people do seem to be using Anki sub-optimally, which may explain ancientcampus's observations.
LessWrong seems to be a big fan of spaced-repetition flashcard programs like Anki, Supermemo, or Mnemosyne. I used to be. After using them religiously for 3 years in medical school, I now categorically advise against using them for large volumes of memorization.
[A caveat before people get upset: I think they appropriate in certain situations, and I have not tried to use them to learn a language, which seems its most popular use. More at the bottom.]
A bit more history: I and 30 other students tried using Mnemosyne (and some used Anki) for multiple tests. At my school, we have a test approximately every 3 weeks, and each test covers about 75 pages of high-density outline-format notes. Many stopped after 5 or so such tests, citing that they simply did not get enough returns from their time. I stuck with it longer and used them more than anyone else, using them for 3 years.
Incidentally, I failed my first year and had to repeat.
By the end of that third year (and studying for my Step 1 boards, a several-month process), I lost faith in spaced-repetition cards as an effective tool for my memorization demands. I later met with a learning-skills specialist, who felt the same way, and had better reasons than my intuition/trial-and-error:
Here are examples of the typical kind of things I memorize every day and have found flashcards to be surprisingly worthless for:
Here is what I now use in place of flashcards:
Spaced repetition is still good for knowledge you need to retrieve immediately, when a 2-second delay would make it useless. I would still consider spaced-repetition to memorize some of the more rarely-used notes on the treble and bass clef, if I ever decide to learn to sight-read music properly. I make no comment on it's usefulness to learn a foreign language, as I haven't tried it, but if I were to pick one up I personally would start with a rosetta-stone-esque program.
Your mileage may vary, but after seeing so many people try and reject them, I figured it was enough data to share. Mnemonic pictures and memory palaces are slightly time consuming when you're learning them. However, if someone has the motivation and discipline to make a stack of flashcards and study them every day indefinitely, then I believe learning and using those skills is a far better use of time.