Hey Tony,

The most important part of the Spaced Repetition System is the "spaced 
review period". They use different formulas to determine when the question 
should be shown to you again, depending on how "hard" it was for you to 
remember the answer this time. Check out the links I gave in the first 
post, particularly this one:

http://augmentingcognition.com/ltm.html

for a better introduction.

My ideal workflow is to take a larger, more detailed tiddler, say my 
tiddler for "The Eifel Tower". As I'm reading it, I can select some text, 
press the "new question" button and a new tiddler is created with 
appropriate tags, question and answer fields, etc. I can then use TW to 
quiz myself and memorize large amounts of information.


On Wednesday, December 19, 2018 at 7:25:36 PM UTC-6, TonyM wrote:
>
> Diego,
>
> I see that the spaced repetition systems are small tests, Q&A, what about 
> a simple spaced review period?
>
> I will give this some thought to overlay tiddlers in my personal wiki, 
> what do you think is most important?
>
> Tell me what you think is key please, and I will use that to inform a 
> solution.
>
> I am very happy with some date algorithms I have recently created and 
> would be happy to propose an efficient way to implement this on any 
> tiddler. 
>
> Regards
> Tony 
>
> On Thursday, December 20, 2018 at 12:09:40 PM UTC+11, Diego Mesa wrote:
>>
>> Tony,
>>
>> "To me this is an algorithm, which could be made to apply to any tiddler 
>>> or set of tiddlers,"
>>
>>
>> This exactly what spaced repition systems address through various 
>> "algorithms". The one that I implemented in anwiki is the same one Anki 
>> uses, called SM-2:
>>
>>
>> https://apps.ankiweb.net/docs/manual.html#what-spaced-repetition-algorithm-does-anki-use
>>
>>
>>
>>  
>>
>> On Wednesday, December 19, 2018 at 7:04:05 PM UTC-6, TonyM wrote:
>>>
>>> Diego,
>>>
>>> I am not so sure what the SRS community see as valid but I would like to 
>>> review material from face to face study briefly at the end of the day, a 
>>> day later, 2 days after that 3 days after that a week after that..
>>>
>>> It is true that unless you do this you are prone to forget 80% of what 
>>> you learned. 
>>>
>>> To me this is an algorithm, which could be made to apply to any tiddler 
>>> or set of tiddlers,  
>>>
>>> *On the knowledge you want to keep, and knowledge you want to memorize.*
>>>
>>>
>>>    - I think we know it when we see it, ie the knowledge we want to 
>>>    keep, however if we think it may be useful and attempt to remember it in 
>>>    the short to medium term, if we forget it in the longer term, perhaps it 
>>>    was of little value.
>>>    - Forgetting things we do not need, or pruning is an important part 
>>>    of remembering in my view, perhaps more so as you get older, and 
>>> definitely 
>>>    if you recall something that is incorrect.
>>>
>>> Regards
>>> Tony
>>>
>>>
>>> On Thursday, December 20, 2018 at 6:36:30 AM UTC+11, Diego Mesa wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Hello all,
>>>>
>>>> As always (and Im sure as alot of you), I am very interested in using 
>>>> TW for more and more things. Right now, I use *one* TW for *all* of my 
>>>> tiddlers, and use tags to separate "domains". In other words, if I think I 
>>>> need another TW, I just make a new tag and voila! it fits in my TW.
>>>>
>>>> As some of you might remember, I have also been very interested in 
>>>> using Spaced Repetition (SR/SRS) to memorize information. Some fantastic 
>>>> introductions to this are:
>>>>
>>>>    - http://augmentingcognition.com/ltm.html
>>>>    - https://www.gwern.net/Spaced-repetition
>>>>    
>>>> There are 2-3 major players in the SRS space, but I could never get the 
>>>> habit to stick with Anki or Memo as I was already working in my TW. As a 
>>>> result, I tried to create a similar effect in TW which led to Anwiki - a 
>>>> simple SRS system built into TW:
>>>>
>>>> http://anwiki.tiddlyspot.com/ 
>>>>
>>>> I am very interested in using TW to store - knowledge I want to be able 
>>>> to keep, look up, organize and store, *as well as* knowledge I need to 
>>>> actively memorize. There is a *huge* SRS community out there always 
>>>> debating what software is better, why, writing plugins for these systems, 
>>>> etc. I think TW is the best place to keep the things I want to memorize 
>>>> in, *because 
>>>> I already keep everything else in there! *If TW is to be a physical 
>>>> (digital) record of my mind and its development, it only makes sense to 
>>>> incorporate this into TW! 
>>>>
>>>> I think if embraced and further developed, it could bring many more 
>>>> people into TW, and become "one of the great" TW plugins like TiddlyMap.
>>>>
>>>> The purpose of this post is to
>>>>
>>>>    1. Inform those of you that don't know about Spaced Repetition
>>>>    2. Ask the community's opinion about the relationship between 
>>>>    knowledge you want to keep, and knowledge you want to memorize. 
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"TiddlyWiki" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to tiddlywiki+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send email to tiddlywiki@googlegroups.com.
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/tiddlywiki.
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/tiddlywiki/74f68e1f-f189-415e-8866-274a999b7481%40googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to