FWIW I wasn't previously familiar with the topic (some background biology knowledge, but not about this in particular) and the chunked version did seem much clearer than the original.
Although I'm uncertain exactly how much of that clarity came specifically from the chunking, versus other changes like including more definitions of terms.
Summary
Here, I show the output of a protocol to break down information that exceeds typical working memory limits into chunks. The goal is to enhance understanding at first reading, both for the person breaking down the information and for the person reading the result. The original text, an explanation of how RNA interference works, can be found under "Text Of The Original Description." Readers who want to skip straight to the result should go to the section "Result of Chunk-Knitting Procedure." The goal is to produce a systematic way of building a composite understanding from complex atomic information. I call this procedure "Chunk-Knitting."
Note: I also expand some acronyms and bold key terms the first time they're introduced in the Chunk-Knitting output, but not in the original text.
Introduction and epistemic status
How can we deal with working memory limitations when presenting complex topics? Often, there are too many individual parts to remember easily. Yet the fascination of understanding how they fit together depends on first mastering these atomic parts. It is hard to maintain focus. It seems that learning may be bottlenecked by the student's ability to get through this period of internalizing atomic parts and their individual relationships. The payoff comes at the end, when the student understands how they all fit together into a powerful integrated whole. This should motivate us to find new ways to present information that minimize the memory and attention limitations that students face at the beginning of this process.
We know that spaced repetition, breaking information into chunks, and building connections between atomic concepts are all useful ways to improve memory and integrative understanding. Chunk-Knitting is an attempt to leverage these three tools to systematically create pedagogical text that is easier to understand the first time the reader encounters the ideas it is conveying. This post is a first attempt to apply Chunk-Knitting. The technique has not been experimentally studied, and there is no data supporting the hypothesis that Chunk-Knitting makes information easier to understand.
RNA interference is a naturally occurring method of gene regulation that is also widely used as an experimental technique and has therapeutic potential. Although the basic mechanism can be compressed to the space of a paragraph, the number of details is large enough to exceed a typical person's working memory capacity. It therefore becomes difficult to learn how RNA interference works on a mechanistic level by reading such an efficiently compressed paragraph. Many descriptions of the mechanisms of RNA interference take just this approach to presenting the topic. This makes it an appropriate target for presenting it via Chunk-Knitting.
The basic procedure of Chunk-Knitting is as follows:
Example
Original
Background
Molecular Mechanisms and Biological Functions of siRNA is a well-cited introduction to siRNA, a key component of RNA interference. We will apply the process of Chunk-Knitting to its highly compressed one-paragraph description. I also include a graphical illustration from another source, which will be recopied with each new approach to RNA interference for the sake of convenient reading. It is dense, and the whole point of this experiment is that it might be difficult to follow. The Chunk-Knitting experiment below is intended to present the same information in a way that's easier to digest at first reading.
Text Of The Original Description
Chunk-Knitting
Step 1: break down natural language into an initial schematic
The first step in Chunk-Knitting is to break down the original paragraph into a process flow diagram. It is not necessary to follow exactly how I produced the following schematic from the former paragraph - I just wanted to give an example of what this schematic might look like. You can compress the information in whatever way makes sense to you.
Step 2: form a Chunk Block Schematic
The next step in Chunk-Knitting is to expand the compressed schematic from step 1 into Chunk Blocks. I start with the components that are most important to the topic, or most likely to be familiar to the reader. Here, I expect that readers interested in siRNA know about mRNA and how it plays into protein production. Since they're reading about siRNA, I select these three pieces of atomic information to form the first Chunk.
Step 3: convert to decompressed natural language prose
The following is how we might convert the Chunk Blocks above into natural language prose. This is what we might present to the reader interested in siRNA. The act of producing it can also be very helpful in installing the information in your own mind. The illustrative diagram from above is reproduced for convenience.
Result of Chunk-Knitting Procedure
Future Directions
After executing the Chunk-Knitting procedure, it is difficult as the writer to know if the resulting text is really easier to understand or not, because you are no longer reading it for the first time. To explore this method further, it would be necessary to produce more examples and run an experiment to see which version of the text - the original compressed paragraph or the Chunk-Knit expanded version - promoted greater comprehension and focuse in first-time readers. I can only report at this time that the process of Chunk-Knitting seemed to help me build a much greater understanding of the material than I had when I first read it. It is time-consuming, and there may be more efficient ways to build that understanding - although any such alternatives might have their own tradeoffs. Chunk-Knitting is a tool I'm excited to keep exploring and add to my toolkit for writing and researching.