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Josh's blog

Latest Method of Generating Mnemonic Images

My latest (and still evolving) way for generating mnemonic images is attached.

Google Chrome Memory Usage vs. Firefox Memory Usage

Firefox memory use - 12 tabs:

firefox_memory_use.png

Staying Warm at Night by Dreaming

Just remembered a weird dream from last night:

San Francisco peaks Arizona
Photo of San Francisco Peaks, Arizona © George Vnoucek

Still Memorizing Mnemonic Images...

I got busy and had to put aside memory training since my last post. Stopping for a little while was a good thing, because it provided a little time for my previous mnemonic system to fade a bit.

At the moment I'm still working on generating my 2814 mnemonic images.

One difficulty I've been having is finding images for numbers that ended in the letter "r". This might only be a problem in American English, but the letter "r" is so strong it can affect the previous vowel. The troubling number combinations are:

Don't let another vacation be ruined by...

Don't let another vacation be ruined by...

Still Generating My List of Mnemonic Images

I'm slowly making progress on building mnemonic images for numbers 000 to 999 and new images for 00 to 99.

I'm attempting to use Ben Pridmore's system, with modifications to the vowels for 000 to 999.

I'm trying to distinguish numbers 00 to 99 by using the regular Major System, but having their words begin with vowels, w, or y to distinguish them from the three digit images. Here are some two-digit numbers as examples:

Thoughts on Memorizing Music With Mnemonic Techniques

Some thoughts on memorizing music with mnemonic techniques:

I haven't tried any of these methods yet -- they are just ideas at the moment.

One idea is to create images for each of the solfège syllables using chromatic variants: do, di, ra, re, ri

Images could be based on using the sounds of the syllables at the beginning of the image words.  For example:

What is the Best Way to Chunk Digits when Memorizing Large Numbers?

I'm more than halfway done with reassigning images to numbers 00 to 999, and put the system to the test while memorizing some driving directions today.

I'm still stuck on one problem: how to break up large numbers into chunks of three digits, when some of the chunks begin with 0 or 00?  I want each image to be made up of the same number of digits, otherwise I think it might be difficult to easily calculate something like "the digit in position #52 is a 6".

Grand Master of Memory

Today I found out that there is something called a Grand Master of Memory. Becoming a Grand Master of Memory requires the following memorization feats:

Random Number Generators for Memory Training

I've created a couple of quick pages that generate 5000 random numbers for practicing memory techniques. Here they are in two easily-printable versions: