L3. 5. Learning to learn_Niv Avancé_AGFE - Janv22 en-GB
I remember better now
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You remember that video you saw on the internet. He was the French memory champion. In 10 minutes, the champion memorised the list, in order, of the 50 countries with the highest CO2 emissions in 2002.In 10 minutes! You could hardly believe it. Once the challenge was over, the champion gave his definition of memory and gave some tips on how everyone can improve their ability to remember more, and almost, according to the champion, infinitely. Wow! It makes you want to become even better at retaining information and developing your memory.
I remember
You have noticed that when you are very interested in a subject, you tend to like to reread the lessons and redo the exercises. And you also like to apply what you have learned. This is reflected in your results, which are good. This form of repetition helps you to remember well.
2.4 Challenge 1: Here is an extract from an article in the white paper "Neuroscience and Artificial Intelligence" published by Woonoz: "And contrary to the classic image of a vast collection of archived data, most of our memories are reconstructions. Because memories are not stored in the brain like books in a library, recalling them each time requires reconstruction from scattered elements in different brain areas. This is why rote learning is not effective, as this process only multiplies isolated islands of knowledge that are difficult to access. Rather than the simple evocation of fixed traces, memory is now seen as a continuous process of recategorisation."
Q1. For the author of the article, our memories are? *
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