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Tips to help you to memorize
Dominic O’Brian
                           of the World Memory
According to O’Brian (8 time winner
Championships), there are 3 principles of memory:

 Association: memory and creativity are based on
  associations
 Location: there is something about placing mental images
  in a specific location that makes them easier to recall
 Imagination: the mind remembers things that are
  exaggerated, so mnemonic images should be vivid and
  exaggerated
The importance of location
                          
        O'Brien said that mnemonic
associations should be given a
specific location.

       When someone's name can't
be remembered, the first thing the
mind does is say, "where did I meet
this person?" As soon as the person
can be placed in a location (e.g., "I
met this person at a cafe last
year"), all the other associated
information about the person
usually comes flooding back.
Some specific techniques
          
We can classify them in 3:


      Association
      Organization
      Visual
      Verbal
Association
    
  The association technique consists to
   link new information to something
   already known.
  Thus we can use the information we
   have stored to give meaning to the
   information we just learned to
   memorize it more easily:
     Search for a context when you’re
      trying to remember someone: where
      did he/she was born? When? What’s
      his/her job?
     Use different senses: how does it
      smell? How does it looks like? How
      does it taste?
Organization
           
This involves:

 Chunking
 Categorization
Chunking
                   
      Although the capacity of short-term memory is
7+/-2 digits, it may increase if you try to remember
groups of information instead. This units of
information is what we call chunks. For example, the
numbers 6-8- 5-0-3-1- 7, can grouped 6.85.03.17 . That
makes it easily to remember!
Categorization
                  Strategies
 This strategy
                        a
                   involves    list of words to
  memorize, and you’ll have to remember the most
  significant of them (the word that encompasses
  the rest of the group).

 This word in memory will give way to the second
  most important word in the group. This will result
  in a process similar to a falling row of dominoes so
  the most important word in the hierarchy will be
  used to remember the second one, and this to the
  next and so in succession.
Visual
 
Chained images
               
This consists on making a picture story of each
 item to be connected together (it is very similar
 to the technique of stories, but is based on the
 image display).
In a list of items, this is the first figure of the
 first two elements vividly, and then
 associating each image to go to mount further.
Chained images
               
For example:

  SHIRT PIANO HOUSE ALARM

You can imagine a clock wrapped in a shirt.
 Once we have this, we can think of the two
 top of a piano, and when we get it, think of a
 house containing a piano on which is the
 jacket that surrounds the clock ....
METHOD OF LOCI
                         you must identify a
 Before using the technique,
  common path that you usually walk (you home, the
  path to your job…).
 What is essential is that you have a vivid visual
  memory of the path and objects along it.
 Once you have determined your path, imagine
  yourself walking along it, and identify specific
  landmarks that you will pass.
METHOD OF LOCI
         
 Watch this video to see how to implement this
  technique:
Verbal
  
Stories
                      
 This is about building stories.
  The evocation of an element
  leads to the evocation of the
  next and so on until
  completion.
 This technique is appropriate
  when we remember a list in a
  certain order
 It is also useful to remember
  number
Stories
                         
 For example, if we want to remember

               007-727-180-7-10-2230-2300-2

 we can invent the following story:

"The plane rose to 007 727. He saw a stewardess 1.80 and
decided to ask seven cafés to talk to her. He saw his watch was
10. The plane landed at 22:30, asked her out and left at 23:30.
They ate and talked until 2 am "
ACRONYMS & ACROSTICS
                           
                        ACRONYMS
 You form acronyms by using each first letter from a group
  of words to form a new word. This is particularly useful
  when remembering words in a specified order. It’s a very
  common technique:
      NBA (National Basketball Associations),
      SCUBA (Self Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus),
      BTUs (British Thermal Units)

   The memory techniques in this section, for example, can be
   rearranged to form the acronym "SCRAM" (Sentences
   (acrostics), Chunking, Rhymes, Acronyms, and Method of loci).
ACRONYMS & ACROSTICS
                           
             SENTENCES/ACROSTICS
 Like acronyms, you use the first letter of each word
 you are trying to remember. Instead of making a new
 word, though, you use the letters to make a sentence.
 Here are some examples:

   My Dear Aunt Sally (mathematical order of operations:
    Multiply and Divide before you Add and Subtract)
   Kings Phil Came Over for the Genes Special
    (Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Genus, Species)
RHYMES & SONGS
                       Odyssey? If you
 Are you familiar with Homer's
  are, then you know that it is quite long! That is why it
  is so remarkable to realize that this, along with many
  ancient Greek stories, was told by storytellers who
  would rely solely on their memories. The use of
  rhyme, rhythm, and repetition helped the
  storytellers remember them.
 It so simple: all you need it’s a melody, and
  something to remember
 Using these techniques can be fun, particularly for
  people who like to create.
RHYMES & SONGS
                      
 You can use the same techniques to better remember
  information from courses. For example, even the
  simple addition of familiar rhythm and melody can
  help. Do you remember learning the alphabet? Click
  the video below:




 In fact, a student demonstrated how she memorized
  the quadratic formula (notorious among algebra
  students for being long and difficult to remember) by
  singing it to a familiar tune!

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Memory techniques

  • 1. Tips to help you to memorize
  • 2. Dominic O’Brian  of the World Memory According to O’Brian (8 time winner Championships), there are 3 principles of memory:  Association: memory and creativity are based on associations  Location: there is something about placing mental images in a specific location that makes them easier to recall  Imagination: the mind remembers things that are exaggerated, so mnemonic images should be vivid and exaggerated
  • 3. The importance of location  O'Brien said that mnemonic associations should be given a specific location. When someone's name can't be remembered, the first thing the mind does is say, "where did I meet this person?" As soon as the person can be placed in a location (e.g., "I met this person at a cafe last year"), all the other associated information about the person usually comes flooding back.
  • 4. Some specific techniques  We can classify them in 3:  Association  Organization  Visual  Verbal
  • 5. Association   The association technique consists to link new information to something already known.  Thus we can use the information we have stored to give meaning to the information we just learned to memorize it more easily:  Search for a context when you’re trying to remember someone: where did he/she was born? When? What’s his/her job?  Use different senses: how does it smell? How does it looks like? How does it taste?
  • 6. Organization  This involves: Chunking Categorization
  • 7. Chunking  Although the capacity of short-term memory is 7+/-2 digits, it may increase if you try to remember groups of information instead. This units of information is what we call chunks. For example, the numbers 6-8- 5-0-3-1- 7, can grouped 6.85.03.17 . That makes it easily to remember!
  • 8. Categorization Strategies  This strategy a involves list of words to memorize, and you’ll have to remember the most significant of them (the word that encompasses the rest of the group).  This word in memory will give way to the second most important word in the group. This will result in a process similar to a falling row of dominoes so the most important word in the hierarchy will be used to remember the second one, and this to the next and so in succession.
  • 10. Chained images  This consists on making a picture story of each item to be connected together (it is very similar to the technique of stories, but is based on the image display). In a list of items, this is the first figure of the first two elements vividly, and then associating each image to go to mount further.
  • 11. Chained images  For example: SHIRT PIANO HOUSE ALARM You can imagine a clock wrapped in a shirt. Once we have this, we can think of the two top of a piano, and when we get it, think of a house containing a piano on which is the jacket that surrounds the clock ....
  • 12. METHOD OF LOCI you must identify a  Before using the technique, common path that you usually walk (you home, the path to your job…).  What is essential is that you have a vivid visual memory of the path and objects along it.  Once you have determined your path, imagine yourself walking along it, and identify specific landmarks that you will pass.
  • 13. METHOD OF LOCI   Watch this video to see how to implement this technique:
  • 15. Stories   This is about building stories. The evocation of an element leads to the evocation of the next and so on until completion.  This technique is appropriate when we remember a list in a certain order  It is also useful to remember number
  • 16. Stories   For example, if we want to remember 007-727-180-7-10-2230-2300-2  we can invent the following story: "The plane rose to 007 727. He saw a stewardess 1.80 and decided to ask seven cafés to talk to her. He saw his watch was 10. The plane landed at 22:30, asked her out and left at 23:30. They ate and talked until 2 am "
  • 17. ACRONYMS & ACROSTICS  ACRONYMS  You form acronyms by using each first letter from a group of words to form a new word. This is particularly useful when remembering words in a specified order. It’s a very common technique:  NBA (National Basketball Associations),  SCUBA (Self Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus),  BTUs (British Thermal Units) The memory techniques in this section, for example, can be rearranged to form the acronym "SCRAM" (Sentences (acrostics), Chunking, Rhymes, Acronyms, and Method of loci).
  • 18. ACRONYMS & ACROSTICS  SENTENCES/ACROSTICS  Like acronyms, you use the first letter of each word you are trying to remember. Instead of making a new word, though, you use the letters to make a sentence. Here are some examples:  My Dear Aunt Sally (mathematical order of operations: Multiply and Divide before you Add and Subtract)  Kings Phil Came Over for the Genes Special (Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Genus, Species)
  • 19. RHYMES & SONGS  Odyssey? If you  Are you familiar with Homer's are, then you know that it is quite long! That is why it is so remarkable to realize that this, along with many ancient Greek stories, was told by storytellers who would rely solely on their memories. The use of rhyme, rhythm, and repetition helped the storytellers remember them.  It so simple: all you need it’s a melody, and something to remember  Using these techniques can be fun, particularly for people who like to create.
  • 20. RHYMES & SONGS   You can use the same techniques to better remember information from courses. For example, even the simple addition of familiar rhythm and melody can help. Do you remember learning the alphabet? Click the video below:  In fact, a student demonstrated how she memorized the quadratic formula (notorious among algebra students for being long and difficult to remember) by singing it to a familiar tune!