All of primality's Comments + Replies

A neat example of the failings of heuristics when applied to mazes is the hedge maze at Egeskov Castle, Denmark (aerial photo, 2D diagram). It's constructed such that if you choose paths seemingly pointing towards the goal, you'll get caught in an infinite loop - and in fact, the most effective route can be found through a heuristic of choosing the path seemingly pointing away from the goal.

How long did it take to build this skill, and how did you do it?

2Slider
Around 3-4 weekends. Althought being actively interested in your surrounding sounds is somewhat a big part of it and that happened between more intense sessions. I found that having and considering edge cases that are just in the limit of your perception is the most developing. I used a walk-in closet to familirise myself with the direct voice in contrast to the echo. Empty rooms are actually noisy. The drop in volume is significant enough that there is a clear difference in effort to produce equal sound even in mono mode. I also tried to have a reference sound I can produce uniformly in a variety of places and isn't disrupting to other people. One was base of my tongue against my palate. However this is a little confusing as the head internal accustics are not the most straigthforward ones and interfere with the external accoustics. I also had a button I would click into place and out of. This had trouble in that it often would have insignificant volume to get a proper feel for environment. One most not forget about just being curious about sounds that just happen to be in the environment. Emergency vechicles are a great source of doppler and the volume output is really great. In urban areas there are plenty of clear surfaces and surface gaps making the moment have a nice variable microstructure. In more wide open spaces the scale of things makes it more easy to pick up on the echo components. Cars in general provide a pretty monotome moving sound source. Riding a bike also provides a constant mechanical noice that has relative position to you fixed and doesn't really tire you out in generating (+ is socially acceptable way of being noizy (you can even get away with devices explictly designed to generate noise (atleast if you are young enough))). I didn't really use it myself but cell phone button/ui noises should be pretty standard, narrow and somewhat acceptable. In private areas clapping has pretty narrow sound profile althought is pretty directional that can
2gwern
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_echolocation mentions some training courses, and checking pages on them, they don't talk about units of years or months, but short 'workshops', which usually means that they won't last more than 3-4 days. So with intense training, it may be learnable quickly.

I quite like Dictionary of Numbers. It provides comparisons for e.g. lengths and amounts of money. Example: I found $200 on the street --> I found $200 [ ≈ Low-end bicycle] on the street.

Danish: møbel (2), stol (1), lænestol (3)

Furniture is countable in Danish, so the word I wrote means "piece of furniture".

It's actually really weird that furniture is uncountable in English. Most other uncountable nouns make sense - you can't really count how many milks you have. I wonder how it came to be that something so tangible is uncountable in English?

2Lumifer
It's not unusual for category nouns to be uncountable precisely because they are category nouns. For example, "clothing", "food", "cutlery", etc.
0Douglas_Knight
It's probably uncountable in English because the original meaning was the "act of furnishing." and yet the closely related word "furnishings" is always plural.

I find that making up mnemonics works well to combat interference. They don't have to be good mnemonics for this to work.

Example: I noticed I kept mixing up the Spanish words aquí (here) and allí (there). I then made up the mnemonic that aquí has a "k" sound so it's close, and allí contains l's so it's long away. A few days later, I encounter the word "allí". My thinking then goes "That's either here or there, I keep confusing those" -> "oh yeah, I made up a mnemonic" -> "allí means there".

I wonder how well this method would work for others.

1TheOtherDave
This is generally how I memorize the bits of scripts that are from my perspective arbitrary. It doesn't even need much of a connection to the text itself. E.g., one line I had trouble with was "Come, sirs", which I kept paraphrasing as any of a dozen phrases that basically mean the same thing, until I associated it with brothels for knights. Now my cue comes along, I know I'm leading a group of people elsewhere, a bunch of competing ways to say that get activated, the brothels for knights concept gets activated along with them, it reinforces "come sirs" and that's what I say.

I speak two languages fluently. I observe that it is slightly easier to count in one language and read in the other. The full ranking is reading without counting > reading English, counting Danish > reading Danish, counting English > reading Danish, counting Danish > reading English, counting English. That counting Danish > counting English is presumably because I don't count in English nearly as often. I used an LW article as my English text, and a physics textbook as my Danish one. I would say these two texts have similar difficulty.

Like bramflakes, I was surprised by how difficult it was to count while reading in a different accent.

These comments really highlight how different people need different surface tricks - to me, the distinction between Working Really Hard and Moving Towards The Goal makes a lot of sense, and you helped me recognize that I sometimes use the former mindset when I know from experience that the latter is much more effective for me. I will now make an effort to change that habit.