Turn your flashcards into Art

post by Heye Groß · 2022-09-04T17:31:08.528Z · LW · GW · 2 comments

Contents

  Consciousness
  Exaptation
  Emergence
  Meta-Level
  Probability Density
  Reframing
  System 2 Thinking
  Mindfulness
  Emotional
  Utility Function
  Value of Information
  Systemic Desensitization
  Cognitive
  Environmental Design
  Game Theory
  End of Life
  Backward Design
  Action Theory
None
2 comments

Epistemic Status: this is just a fun idea I had, I will report back in the future if this increases my retention. Crosspost from heye.earth

Tl;dr: Use Midjourney/Dall-E 2/Stable Diffusion to generate visual mnemonics to increase retention.

Flashcards are powerful ways to learn, but they often use only the linguistic part of our brain. What if you could invoke the strong emotions that images entail for every piece of knowledge you want to learn, in a semi-automated way?

With Midyourney you can: just copy paste (please someone automate this for me) the front or back of any flashcard into the engine and you will get these beautiful images back. The following are a few examples from my Anki deck, more at my Midjourney account.

Consciousness

Exaptation

Emergence

Meta-Level

Probability Density

Reframing

System 2 Thinking

Mindfulness

Emotional

Utility Function

Value of Information

Systemic Desensitization

Cognitive

Environmental Design

Game Theory

End of Life

Backward Design

Action Theory

2 comments

Comments sorted by top scores.

comment by Eric Askelson (ericask) · 2022-09-05T16:44:57.385Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

This certainly seems like a way to increase the likelihood that I associate a response with a flashcard in Anki, but will this actually help recall? 

For example, one of my Anki cards might ask how to recursively copy all files with a certain extension out of a directory tree; by adding an image I might strengthen the association between the front and back of the Anki card, but not increase the probability that I actually remember the correct invocation to move files when I really need to. 

This is a failure mode I've noticed before with spaced repetition, where I'll quickly have a response to one of my Anki cards because I only have one question in a given format, even though answering the true question would be harder. 

Is there a different style of flashcard where this wouldn't be a downside? The downside above applies if you associate Question + Image -> Answer, but maybe a custom card type that breaks down each pair into a triple would work? Question -> Image, Image -> Answer, and finally Question -> Answer. I'll give this some thought.

Replies from: 9eB1
comment by 9eB1 · 2022-09-07T04:52:19.028Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

For language flashcards, you can have the front card be something like "Biblioteca" and the back card "Library [generated picture of a library]." This helps recall even though it's not part of the prompt-- it just seems to stick better in your memory.