Learning and Memory Palaces
fsnowdin.xyzThe tone of this article strongly implies the technique will only work for foundational facts, unless you gamify it into the goal of the exercise in the first place: The investment of time to learn a random 52 card deck order only pays back if you can monetize the order of that specific deck.
Learning complex chromatic chord sequences, plays back literally as you make music. Memorising the score, or the script of a play, pays back in the (repeated) performance.
I think memory palaces are wonderful, but if you want to hold onto some ephemeral knowledge in a corner of your discipline and only refer to it twice in 20 years, the cost:benefit might not pay out.
yeah. memory palaces shouldn't be abused to try to remember every single thing. most of the trivial stuff we'd be better off just putting them in a notebook somewhere and refer to on the occasion we need them.
I have never tried memory palaces, but I have always wondered if the application of automated memory palaces in VR would work and make the process more efficient.
it can certainly help. doing memory palaces with just your head, you're kinda stuck with being only able to store simple information. using VR, maybe I can embed videos/audio across my memory palaces, add portals to other memory palaces even. all of that in addition to making the creation and recall process very intuitive.