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by JohnBooty
2486 days ago
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IMHO it's primarily because you have to process and comprehend the information in order to make a decision about what's important enough to jot down. Although, anecdotally, I find that writing notes by hand is better for recall than typing. I'm not sure if this is because writing activates different parts of the brain, or simply because writing is slower and forces me to therefore think harder and comprehend better because I need to be 2x as selective about what makes it into my notes. My money's on the latter, but who knows? |
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I can roughly keep up in real time with speaking on the keyboard. Even though speaking is a bit faster than my max rate around 90 wpm, by dropping filler words and gaps I can mostly avoid summarizing and quote verbatim. When transposing at full speed like that, I feel like a conduit at times, very little sticks deeply in memory.
Contrast with writing notes, where I'll only write down things I find particularly important. Most of the time I'm just trying to actively listen.
Purely anecdotally, I feel like when I am typing and summarizing to the same compression ratio as writing, my retention with typing is better, because I can do it without looking, it's faster, and I can tune back in to the speaker.
On the other other hand, with a laptop open, I'm much more likely to get distracted with emails/tasks.
Bottom line, I think we need to study more axes of this problem, if only because it gives neat insights into cognition.