A Simple Way to Learn Complex Skills

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Benjamin Keep, PhD, JD

Benjamin Keep, PhD, JD

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 422
@darby3762
@darby3762 9 ай бұрын
Cuts to the chase, no annoying intro, no weird picture of the content creator wearing a weird facial expression, no overly enthusiastic style of delivery trying to get you to feel excited and amped up but only serve to exhaust you, simple presentation that works, no annoying music. Seriously, so many have become slaves to the algorithm trends. This is a breath of fresh air.
@NewLife2028
@NewLife2028 8 ай бұрын
Yeah, and he's HOT, too!
@forhadrh
@forhadrh 8 ай бұрын
Agree 💖💖
@Dani4You-mw9md
@Dani4You-mw9md 7 ай бұрын
@@NewLife2028 why?? why??
@ishrakmujibift4269
@ishrakmujibift4269 6 ай бұрын
Well, you will not be able to reach a wider audience without that. Nevertheless, I would assume it would be nice to have an audience that is inherently curious about learning, rather than someone who just wants some short tips and tricks because they have to cram for an exam.
@amichayr3418
@amichayr3418 Жыл бұрын
This is such a simple and almost obvious method. I am surprised everyone goes through high school and sometimes colleges and universities without even being exposed to content like this. You are a life saver for anyone who enjoys learning!
@romulobr
@romulobr Жыл бұрын
This is called fundamentals, any course on anything starts with that, and yes the reason “people aren’t told this” is because it is literally obvious. Anyone who is trying to learn or teach anything knows that, what are the basics or fundamentals for the skills, focus on that and everything else will become easier.
@CapeSkill
@CapeSkill Жыл бұрын
@@romulobr no it's not obvious at all, especially not middle school, high school.
@romulino
@romulino Жыл бұрын
I don't know, maybe it should be. That's how every curriculum is designed, you start with the fundamentals otherwise it becomes impossible to learn. That's why we have to do so many math exercises since the beginning of our learning journey, if you don't focus on those and stick with them, you just can't learn anything more advanced, ever. That applies for every skill, you can't write proper sentences if you didn't focus on grammar basics, and so on and so on. @@CapeSkill
@d.dimitrov8972
@d.dimitrov8972 Жыл бұрын
@@romulobr seems like you are an expert on learning and have some tacit knowledge on the subject, but for some of us such information is not so obvious so when someone points it out to us like Benjamin does it really helps
@swagcat51
@swagcat51 5 ай бұрын
@@romulobrthis approach is common sense in a learning environment such as school but in real life contexts such as video games nah.
@frezzingaces
@frezzingaces Жыл бұрын
The key thing in the study was they were telling the groups what were the most impactful parts of the game up front, instead of the control who had to figure out themselves over time. This is why coaching is so good to learn skills - being told what's important to focus on is key. I wonder if this same approach could be replicated in learning new skills where it's unknown what are the important factors.
@daczito
@daczito Жыл бұрын
Interesting thought!
@agustinbjr
@agustinbjr Жыл бұрын
If there’s a task where the important factors are unknown, then I don’t think it can be replicated. Knowing what’s the most important to focus on (normally fundamentals) is crucial
@IdeaAgeConsulting
@IdeaAgeConsulting Жыл бұрын
This is a great point. I think for the most part, even new areas can be decoded with some thought and some outreach to others in the same domain. Once key areas have been decoded, the insight from above could probably be applied to great results.
@raybod1775
@raybod1775 Жыл бұрын
I believe it will become obvious after time examining whatever skill we want to learn and ask “What is critically important to do what I want? How can I do this skill badly, but still do it?” It’s possible to figure out anything over time by going back and ask yourself “Okay, I’m not good enough, what am I most bad at and what can I do to improve myself?” It’s always better to find good mentors, coaches or classes in learning skills, but not always possible.
@frezzingaces
@frezzingaces Жыл бұрын
@@raybod1775 Yeah, reflection. That’s why serious gamers do vod reviews, like the rewatch their own games with a more critical eye, instead of just playing endlessly.
@earthspeed
@earthspeed Жыл бұрын
Basic Steps: Focus on Specific Aspects: When learning complex skills, break them down into specific aspects that can be practiced individually. Sequential Attention: Instead of trying to master everything at once, focus on one aspect at a time and practice it thoroughly. Switch Attention: After dedicating time to one aspect, switch your focus to another. Continue this process, alternating between different aspects. Integration: After practicing each aspect individually, return to the original aspect and integrate all the learned components. Key Points: Complex Skills: Some skills can be broken down into discrete steps for practice, while others involve interdependent parts that can't be practiced separately. Attention Matters: Changing what you focus on is a powerful way to learn complex skills effectively. It's crucial to pay attention to the right aspects at the right time. Creating Building Blocks: Focusing on one aspect helps the brain create meaningful building blocks for more complex skills. Sequential Attention Yields Better Learning: Alternating attention between different aspects of a skill over time is more effective than trying to focus on everything at once. Continued Learning Gains: Even after switching to normal practice, the group that sequentially paid attention to two aspects continued to outperform others. Generalization to Other Contexts: This approach has been replicated in various contexts, indicating its broad applicability. Focused Attention: Focusing on specific aspects allows learners to build the necessary pieces and integrate them effectively over time. Overall, the key takeaway is that by dividing complex skills into manageable components and systematically focusing on each aspect, you can improve your learning and performance in a more efficient and effective way.
@kallenijs
@kallenijs Жыл бұрын
This makes sense for most physical sports: you need to use you whole body and pay attention to a million different things, but by focusing on a single small aspect each session, you can improve steadily, even if you are still terrible in most aspects.
@lazygardens
@lazygardens Жыл бұрын
It also works for non-physical activities. Editing, for example is a complex task where any edit affects everything else, but if you want to teach someone to edit you have to focus them on one component until they grasp it. Because Everywhere, All at Once is too much.
@slstudio2591
@slstudio2591 Жыл бұрын
Key takeaways for video: Complex Skills Require Attention to Interdependent Parts: - Some skills, like brewing tea, can be broken down into discrete steps. - However, many skills, such as playing Starcraft, involve interdependent parts that can't be practiced separately. Changing What You Pay Attention to Matters: - The video highlights a study involving the video game Space Fortress to illustrate this point. - Learners were divided into four groups, each focusing on different aspects of the game. Attention Creates Building Blocks: - The study revealed that those who focused on one aspect of the game initially performed better. - Paying attention to one aspect helps the brain create meaningful building blocks for the skill. Sequential Attention Yields Better Learning: - The recommended method is to pay attention to one aspect of the skill for a period, then switch to another aspect, and repeat. - This sequential approach is more effective than trying to pay equal attention to everything at once. Continued Learning Gains: - The group that sequentially paid attention to two aspects continued to outperform the others even after switching to normal gameplay. Generalization to Other Contexts: - The finding has been replicated in various other contexts, suggesting its broad applicability. Benefits of Focused Attention: - Focusing on one aspect at a time allows learners to build the necessary pieces and integrate them effectively over time.
@Ojalalluevapronto
@Ojalalluevapronto Жыл бұрын
It's incredible how this apply for every subject, I use to play chess online just for fun without seen any improvement for years, then i started paying attention to not go into suspicious forcing tactics, then paying attention to play standard moves until the opponent make some weak move and profit, then to play the most confortable moves for me when i'm winning and not necessary the absolute best, and i started getting a little bit better.
@JasonMitchellofcompsci
@JasonMitchellofcompsci Жыл бұрын
This works for language too. Nearly all learning software doesn't work because it wants to reward you with forming sentences right away. But if you were to just hard memorize nouns for a month, and then hard memorize verbs for a month, you are going to be understanding enough in the sentences you hear to start noticing grammar patterns on your own. Add a little book learning to aid and it isn't too bad.
@HOWARD963_
@HOWARD963_ Жыл бұрын
Have you ever tried the etymology of every noun or verb?
@JasonMitchellofcompsci
@JasonMitchellofcompsci Жыл бұрын
​@@HOWARD963_ I'm not saying to memorize every noun or verb. I'm saying that memorizing single words is a very easy task. And after two months of drilling them you will understand enough that the rest of learning a language will come pretty easily. You will be guarenteed to recognize something from nearly every sentence you hear. Some people study a language for a year and still fail.
@Anxiou5Panda
@Anxiou5Panda Жыл бұрын
I agree with you. I am not trying to actively learn Japanese because I am not yet paying close attention to it, but by constantly watching anime, the most common terms, expressions, or greetings gets drilled to your brain you'll start to recognize patterns or can somewhat understand what a character or an actual person is saying. Of course it's not 100% precise nor accurate but that's because as I've said, I am not yet deep diving into it. So hypothetically, if I do, with this method, I might learn to speak reasonably well in a year.
@batlin
@batlin Жыл бұрын
I really like this idea. I think you've touched on this in another video, but one thing to be wary of is to not get too bogged down at the mechanistic level. The Perception and Action podcast discussed an interesting study that wanted to determine whether you should start with a very easy task and gradually make it more difficult, or start with a very difficult task and gradually make it easier. I think they were learning to throw darts or something. It turned out that the first method was much better, where subjects stood very close to the target so that the shot would succeed like 90% of the time, then increase the distance as long as accuracy didn't start to drop too far. Their theory was that starting with a really difficult task caused people to spend a lot of their time hypothesising about what was going wrong, which hampered or prevented implicit learning processes. In the scenario starting with unmissable shots, they didn't bother consciously reasoning so much and implicit learning was able to take place unhindered. I suspect this is one reason why children learn complex skills depending heavily on procedural and motor memory -- like music or languages -- more easily than adults. Of course they have an advantage in having much better access to neuroplasticity (even if they don't care about the topic), but they're also more likely to just enjoy _doing_ the skill and paying curious but relaxed attention to the output, rather than focusing so much on internal mechanistic factors. I remember as an adult trying to improve at snooker, constantly asking "is my elbow sticking out too much? Am I twisting my wrist during the shot? Is my leg in the wrong place or not bent enough, or too much? Stance too wide?". Of course, another benefit kids get is that they tend to play around with the parameters more, automatically allowing them to explore more of the action space, where adults tend to want to rigorously perform "correctly".
@benjaminkeep
@benjaminkeep Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the thoughtful comment! Some of what you talk about here is also related to internal vs external focus. Generally speaking, with motor skills, external focus results in more efficient learning.
@sohgesu813
@sohgesu813 Жыл бұрын
nice and insightful comment, would you mind sharing the link to the exact perception and action podcast you cited? I also listen to it as well. Have a great day!
@batlin
@batlin Жыл бұрын
@@sohgesu813 hi, the episode I was thinking of is 410 - Combined Effects of Variability and Errors in Practice Design. Specifically the discussion of "errorless vs errorful practice" about 5:40 into the recording.
@Gameboob
@Gameboob Жыл бұрын
​@@batlinthanks for mentioning that podcast! Looks very informative!!
@StillAliveAndKicking_
@StillAliveAndKicking_ Жыл бұрын
I’ve watched kids learn skating and ice hockey, and they do so much faster than adults. One key reason is less fear, with less risk. If a child falls while skating, they feel much less pain. This is because they are smaller and lighter. Similarly a beetle can fall several feet, and walk off as if nothing had happened. However beetles don’t skate well. With language kids don’t worry about mistakes, whereas adults are self conscious, and will usually be corrected by native speakers.
@briankim7442
@briankim7442 10 ай бұрын
Its exactly like in starcraft and chess. Most of the times they recomment you to choose and practise openings only for x amount of times. They set you for a solid base to then practise mid-game tactics, which eventually set you up for end-games.1 step at a time, repeated for thousands of times! Really glad this video appeared on my recommended feed! And really glad that I clicked it! Hopefully this news is encouraging. Definitely you deserve many more subs as many have already said. Remember me when you blow up!
@30Phani
@30Phani Жыл бұрын
If you wrote a book on learning i would buy it. Keep making these videos.Thank you!
@benjaminkeep
@benjaminkeep Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the kind words! I do have some book ideas, but am trying to grow my online presence first, which makes it easier to pitch book proposals. : )
@lamp2208
@lamp2208 Жыл бұрын
@@benjaminkeep im curious, is your PhD free to view online?
@benjaminkeep
@benjaminkeep Жыл бұрын
searchworks.stanford.edu/view/12663695. It's on learning problem solving in a complex scientific domain. Doesn't make for great reading. 😅
@tullochgorum6323
@tullochgorum6323 Жыл бұрын
@@benjaminkeep Sadly your following in this excellent channel is far more modest than it deserves. I don't know how the KZbin algo prioritises content, but quality doesn't seem to be much of a factor. It's depressing how many of the popular channels on learning how to learn give some pretty iffy advice. Endless content on flashcards, for example, which are a woeful approach to learning any complex topic...
@lucienkennedy1997
@lucienkennedy1997 Жыл бұрын
I’d buy it too
@thatskums
@thatskums 11 ай бұрын
You give the best advice ever. No other channel is as scientific and as detailed as yours is! Thank you for all your efforts
@DarrenMcStravick
@DarrenMcStravick Жыл бұрын
This is just like iterative systems development methodologies. Build a little bit of each part of a system in sequence connecting each part together, then go back through another iteration to build on and/or revise the parts you initially worked on. Repeat this process until the complete system has been developed, test it and once tests are successful and confirmation is received, implement it. Really wicked stuff! -- You're helping me connect my learning material with both my learning method and my background knowledge!
@je4a301
@je4a301 9 ай бұрын
Rarely do I see videos with so much value delivered in a comprehensive manner within such a short video
@centrumsaiyan7623
@centrumsaiyan7623 Жыл бұрын
I have learnt a similar technique in 'Learn to learn' from coursera. It works wonderful. In just 3 months I was able to learn boxing, drumming, complex coding, and pass german language. The idea is to use active and passive learning technique. Apparently your brain by default does the passive learning. All you gotta do is switch between each skills after a session(active) and let the brain learn the pattern over the skills you are trying to master(passive). Correct me if I'm wrong, I am always willing to learn.
@Rinzlov
@Rinzlov Жыл бұрын
Did you look into proffesional starcraft training forums? 😄The literally have separate training maps and mods to train separately the resources, building, expansions, scouting etc, and then they have training resources that start combining these things.
@profet1385
@profet1385 Жыл бұрын
That's my spot as well
@rashedulkabir6227
@rashedulkabir6227 6 ай бұрын
When you combine you will have to pay attention to all aspects at the same time ?
@Rinzlov
@Rinzlov 6 ай бұрын
@@rashedulkabir6227 Yeah, but contrary to this video the skills can actually be taken apart and trained separately. And for professional players it's a must. And you only move to combining them once you get really good at each of them separately.
@AEGIS-RED-MEGA-VIEWS
@AEGIS-RED-MEGA-VIEWS Жыл бұрын
divide and conquer u say? I don't know how many of us remember how we learned to use pc or phone, but we didn't went "oh, let's go learn use this device", but we rather just went exploring, doing meaningless things. That's a great way to learn and master things. By just exploring without expecting anything in return (or not much). Good vid
@ioewguboiuewrgnl
@ioewguboiuewrgnl Ай бұрын
Fantastic video, thank you! This actually explains why experienced Elden Ring players suggest doing difficult boss fights by focusing only on dodging, blocking, or parrying. Once you master that, you can move on to the actual boss fight.
@harmez7
@harmez7 Жыл бұрын
you didnt waste your view's time by someting like an into or BS talk and went straight to the talk, RESPECT.
@energyeve2152
@energyeve2152 Жыл бұрын
I’ve learned this most recently in my playing basketball and also playing overwatch. I started focusing on certain aspects of my game and I saw huge improvements
@lapatria100
@lapatria100 Жыл бұрын
Great video. I notice this with calculus, personally. I generally practice solving a multitude of problems without stressing too much about understanding. Eventually, i dive deeper into trying to understand the significance of these problems while at the same time practicing some problems make the connection. So: 1. Doing then 2. Understanding Then 1+2
@pockster2854
@pockster2854 3 ай бұрын
StarCraft mentioned?!?!? I discovered your channel about two weeks ago and I cannot express how helpful it has already been, especially in the self-confidence department. I am going to university in my late 20s for the first time and I never really "learned how to learn". I always felt that I was not capable enough. Which was true but not for the reasons I thought I was! Thank you for providing so many people with these great tools and new perspectives on learning and more. I truly am grateful!
@baconrocksable
@baconrocksable 4 ай бұрын
this is true this is how i learned to drive staying in my line, making sure my turns weren't too wide, lane changes, maintaining speed, looking out for people around you all of this was overwhelming at once but when I focused on one skill or aspect at a time it became much easier to just drive :)
@TangentMoon
@TangentMoon Жыл бұрын
It's funny, I just stumbled upon this idea myself when trying to teach myself music composition and production. Before, I was just starting with a blank page, and trying to learn all at once in every project. Recently I've been consciously breaking up the skills in each session: writing a theme, orchestrating, sound design, arrangement, mixing mastering etc. And while it still looks like I am doing the same thing, as in the game example, I have found it mentally much easier to have a clear focus on what exactly I am going to do each time I sit down to try and create music.
@TheRitesh41
@TheRitesh41 Жыл бұрын
This is something i unknowingly employed in all areas of my life. its simply understanding you can only focus on one thing at a time and yes it will mean focus on one will result in neglected areas being lackluster but over time they too can be focused upon.
@Super21Nash
@Super21Nash Жыл бұрын
love how short this video is. Not a lot of time was spent on the build up, message was actually something novel for me, and the message was simple. loved it.
@ericm9495
@ericm9495 Жыл бұрын
I love how you mentioned starcraft at the beginning because I remember learning this exact concept from jakatak, who is a starcraft content creator that emphasizes exactly this. Break up a task into simpler bits, practice those, then put them all together.
@zardecil9419
@zardecil9419 Жыл бұрын
Jakatak is off making an RTS now. How time flies.
@TheIllerX
@TheIllerX Жыл бұрын
Just found this channel and I really like the content so far. Science based, easy to follow and understand with useful advice. Far too many people with youtube channels try to put up too much of a show and exaggerate how good their content is with titles as "Boost you skill level 10000%", "You life will never be the same after listening to this" and so on.
@darby3762
@darby3762 9 ай бұрын
Exactly!
@alexcaminiti
@alexcaminiti Жыл бұрын
After 20 years of engineering/mixing and building different iterations of my recording studios, I set out to build my own hardware recording system. Integrating myriad components from existing systems. I realized that this is what I was doing throughout the past 20 years, and when it came to designing my system, I had ChatGPT, and then GPT-4 to help me understand things i'd never have been able to do on my own. It was like my own personal assistant helping me execute a method of learning and system design that I knew on a deep level. What I have been able to accomplish in a year would have taken 5. It's really cool to see this video and know that there is a method I have been using my whole life. Thanks for making this.
@norliegh
@norliegh Жыл бұрын
this has been goto journey since last 2 years. it's much much beneficial. i quit as soon as i loose interest sometimes for days weeks or months but i also remember to return & complete another chunk of that thing
@pierrotlasticot5848
@pierrotlasticot5848 9 ай бұрын
that's what my singing teacher had me doing for years, and it works great. the voice is a complex system, involving way more parts than you can imagine, and most of these parts are interdependent and hard to isolate. focusing on just 1 or 2 things for the next couple of sessions while the whole mechanisms works has been very helpful in overall progressing
@Andruarte-qq6fo
@Andruarte-qq6fo Жыл бұрын
Divide and conquer that's a powerful concept with tons of application on daily basis
@Lokislav
@Lokislav Жыл бұрын
I've noticed the same thing when playing CS:GO. Those who spent thousands of hours playing match-making only/mostly were often times no match to those who were grinding particular niches of the game, such as smoke and flash lineups, counter-strafing, prefiring, remembering angles, spawn timings, movement of your own character, predicting the other enemy's next move, practicing headshot-only deathmatches, tracking heads of moving bots on certain practice maps, the list goes on. You can much more effectively target all those necessary skills in a much shorter timespan. It was a really cool thing to witness as I grew almost exponentially while my long-term teammates were almost stagnating. One thing I was lacking at the end of it all, was nerves. Those who were playing thousands of hours match-making had a more stable stress response to certain situations than me, I could see the difference in nervousness especially in clutches (1v2, 1v1, etc.). That's something you just can't practice, but grow to with time.
@ytpah9823
@ytpah9823 Жыл бұрын
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation: 00:00 ☕ Some skills, like brewing tea, can be broken down into discrete steps for practice, while others, like playing Starcraft, involve multiple interdependent parts. 00:52 🎮 For complex skills, changing what you focus on can be a powerful way to learn, as demonstrated by a study on the video game "Space Fortress." 01:18 📋 Researchers divided learners into groups and gave them different focal instructions for practice sessions, emphasizing different parts of the game. 02:15 👀 Groups given specific aspects to pay attention to during practice scored higher than the control group which didn't have any particular focus. 03:14 🧠 This method, focusing on specific aspects, helps our brain create building blocks for more complex skills. 03:39 🔄 For mastering interdependent skills, one can focus on different aspects sequentially and then revisit them, leading to enhanced learning. 04:08 🔍 Directing attention to certain aspects rather than juggling everything at once can lead to greater learning gains.
@Erick-no8zn
@Erick-no8zn Жыл бұрын
AI
@AEGIS-RED-MEGA-VIEWS
@AEGIS-RED-MEGA-VIEWS Жыл бұрын
divide and..
@abdirahmandama3266
@abdirahmandama3266 Жыл бұрын
@@AEGIS-RED-MEGA-VIEWS multiply?
@bonaface
@bonaface Жыл бұрын
ok do his work for him. the real lesson is how to pay attention to this video! Zzzzzzz bring a pillow cuz it is napping time.
@szymonbaranowski8184
@szymonbaranowski8184 Жыл бұрын
bro it's 4 minutes video you need to have a hardcore ADHD to need timestamps here better contribute on 2h videos of Huberman podcast 😂
@tullochgorum6323
@tullochgorum6323 Жыл бұрын
The other day we had a chat about applying skill learning research to language learning. I suspect that this strategy could be useful for - say, a beginner trying to listen to native speech. This is a notoriously confusing and demoralising experience, so breaking it down might be helpful. They could start by listening for word boundaries, for example. Then they could listen for the overall shape of the intonation. Then they could try and pick out the verbs, then the nouns, and so on. Gradually, the undifferentiated mush of sound would hopefully begin to take on some meaning? I suspect that this might be particularly useful for people studying distant languages such as, say, Turkish, Korean or Mandarin for an English native.
@benjaminkeep
@benjaminkeep Жыл бұрын
Interesting approach!
@bandiddums
@bandiddums Жыл бұрын
I was thinking that I'll be able to learn something new, but rather this video defines it in a more general and clear way of something that I've already been doing subconsciously for some things
@gutsinpocket
@gutsinpocket Жыл бұрын
I actually didn't fully understand the concept of FOCUS before watching this video. Thanks a lot
@timmycorini
@timmycorini Жыл бұрын
very true! i run businesses, and this concept is 100% correct. even though each of the parts of running a business are interdependent, you can focus on one at a time as a manager/owner and get better at each then overall it makes the whole machine better
@Hyumanity
@Hyumanity Жыл бұрын
Differentiation and integration. Ah, the meta-principle of our universe. This was very useful, thank you.
@sladewilson649
@sladewilson649 3 ай бұрын
I usually take Kobe Bryant's advice first is to break down the basics then another aspect is understanding that u are not going to get all the knowledge fast unless u are Einstein, having a long term view helps a lot And what's makes important is space repetition When i learn something i try to map everything, gimme all you got about this thing, usually a takes a month of videos and books from that u kind of understand Maybe 5% of everything but that exorcise demons and make your mind relax , its like saying to your mind , that's a lot of things to lear however it's not impossible, than you break down the basics and start leaning each small topic everyday , if you learned something today you revise same day next week and you keep adding more things, revising is way easier than learning from scratch so you keep spacing and adding more things every week . For me that helped a lot Especially bcz i got a terrible memory
@juancruzlives
@juancruzlives Жыл бұрын
this is really cool. and i really like the fact that you can apply this method to basically everything: football skills, guitar playing, videogames, studying, social skills, etc., etc. thank you for the short and concise video
@allanroy7853
@allanroy7853 Жыл бұрын
I used a similar trick in college, Your brain has to process information as “new” 3 times within 4 hours to log it in permanent memory, so learn something, jump to a different topic, back to the fist, then something new/different again then the first, this is why pointless random factoids can stay with you forever, it all depends on the intervals you think about them at.
@ryder1658
@ryder1658 Жыл бұрын
Analyze activity. Find 3-4 main pillars of said activity and call them skills. Spend 3 sessions focusing on a skill before moving to the next and repeating. Once all skills have been practiced, conduct an unfocused pass for 3 sessions to integrate.
@samoldfield9997
@samoldfield9997 Жыл бұрын
bro one of the greatest youtube channels ever.
@magburner
@magburner Жыл бұрын
This is how I learn everything. I focus on the small detail, and then expand outwards.
@vijaygopal9557
@vijaygopal9557 6 ай бұрын
This is such a helpful video and was just what I was looking for - Its simple, to the point, uncluttered, research-backed and so applicable. Like another subscriber has commented - you’re a gift to all those who want to better their learning skills. Thank you for the work you do
@brianr2941
@brianr2941 Жыл бұрын
I’m going to try this for jiu jitsu. My instructor just talked about how he became really proficient in certain positions and it was similar to what you are saying. He just tried one simple technique each roll session and over time became very good at hitting those techniques in future rolls.
@criticalbil1
@criticalbil1 Жыл бұрын
That was excellent. Genuinely insightful and practical. 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
@danielphil80
@danielphil80 Жыл бұрын
If the game is life, this principle still applies. Those more knowledgeable or skillful about the world tend to move faster than their counterparts. The most successful people tend to read things very unrelated to their main jobs.
@akagordon
@akagordon Жыл бұрын
If you've ever wondered how a drummer does a drum roll, or plays complex sticking across an entire drum kit, it's the same thing. They practice slowly, and analytically, focusing on one limb at a time.
@RobertStoffel-c6c
@RobertStoffel-c6c Ай бұрын
You make complex topics feel simple!
@danielboffa7416
@danielboffa7416 Жыл бұрын
interesting, feels fairly intuitive, like in learning to swim you might break it up into, kicking, arm strokes, breathing, body positioning, etc to improve
@CaptainWumbo
@CaptainWumbo Жыл бұрын
I think it's largely about what is signal vs what is noise. Having important aspects pointed out to you helps you build intuition for what's important. But you could just as well sabotage learning and performance by asking people to focus on something unimportant early on, say conjugations for verbs in a language learning class for people with a vocabulary under 5000 words. The right thing at the right time is very important to outcomes, and with no guidance whatsoever you may focus on something so marginal it does not help you almost at all. To take StarCraft as example, many people focused too heavily on micro when their results would improve much faster if they knew how to grow their economy and make more stuff.
@benjaminkeep
@benjaminkeep Жыл бұрын
100% agreed. This comes back to the difficulty of learning on your own and the value that instructors provide. What I present in the video is a simple, but basic approach. There are many ways of structuring "part-whole" practice in complex tasks that can be more effective, especially when designed by a teacher or coach.
@marcustulliuscicero9512
@marcustulliuscicero9512 Жыл бұрын
Been learning leatherworking, this is a good method for improving my skills. Thank you.
@Oridan1
@Oridan1 Жыл бұрын
I recently did this without realizing to learn age of empires 2. It's an amazing method to learning complex skills!
@kavitaa4493
@kavitaa4493 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for explaining this concept. I am currently learning new things which seem complex , but I was intuitively following this approach without realising there is a study done to back it up. It reinforced I'm on the right path. Thank u!!
@andybrice2711
@andybrice2711 Жыл бұрын
Here in Britain, everyone learns to drive a stick-shift car by default. And many people fail their tests several times before getting a license. I have a hypothesis that people would pass quicker if they learned to drive an automatic car first. Because you'd have a chance to learn road positioning before you had to operate the clutch and gearbox. Likewise, I think people might pick up guitar skills more quickly if they first learned the ukulele.
@marshallworthington6780
@marshallworthington6780 Жыл бұрын
Makes so much sense. Thank you, Benjamin.
@ezraantenh2947
@ezraantenh2947 Жыл бұрын
I didn't feel dumb while watching this video. Thank you, sir.
@unknowninfinium4353
@unknowninfinium4353 Жыл бұрын
This is interesting. My Dad taught me this at a very early age without knowing such things existed. He took a different approach, quite simple really. All he said from the beginning was "You're a failure". It's what you would call say counter-argument. (Even if its silly). Great video.
@reinux
@reinux Жыл бұрын
Conclusion makes sense, and that's how I learn when I'm practicing violin or Starcraft, but I wonder if that's really what that study is revealing? It could be that there's a threshold for both skills after which they begin to synergize, not that rotating in itself has some specific cognitive benefit. Each skill probably has diminishing returns as well. How long is each of the sessions? It would be interesting to see this study repeated but with different rotation durations.
@IDMYM8
@IDMYM8 29 күн бұрын
Well done Mr. Benjamin for keeping things simple and to the point 😅
@Max-tq1ig
@Max-tq1ig Жыл бұрын
Thanks, Benji, this is a really excellent conclusion and study! I will put it into practice, I promise!!.
@evermorecurious91
@evermorecurious91 11 ай бұрын
Simple yet powerful! Good illustration.
@TiffanyNg100
@TiffanyNg100 Жыл бұрын
Algorithm always know what I’m thinking and it’s scary how accurate my current thinking and this video answer my problem
@juliangamez5168
@juliangamez5168 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic Dr.Keep. Many thanks for sharing the concepts.👏👏👏👏
@Darkness-rs9sp
@Darkness-rs9sp Жыл бұрын
Thank you, bud. Recently started playing CS2 as a hobby but I wanted to get better. Will try this tip, appreciate it.
@UberOcelot
@UberOcelot Жыл бұрын
Since getting back into CS with CS2, this concept has been on my mind. I find myself getting better with small little details incrementally, but my overall ability influences how well I can experience all this small skills. I can put some of them together and any moment, and over time it slowly becomes second nature.
@AEGIS-RED-MEGA-VIEWS
@AEGIS-RED-MEGA-VIEWS Жыл бұрын
counter strike 2,lol?
@_Itachi_240_
@_Itachi_240_ 7 ай бұрын
This video is packed with great takeaways! While taking notes helps, sometimes an automated summary would be great for active learning. Any recommendations?
@okdokie278
@okdokie278 Жыл бұрын
Excellent! This is EXACTLY the sort of content on learning science I was looking for! Super subscribed!
@JacopoSkydweller
@JacopoSkydweller Жыл бұрын
This is helpful, I am a Mech E and have ADHD and often gravitate to complex things/game/systems/projects because they have a lot of different things interacting which is interesting and keeps me engaged. But it's often difficult to break in and learn these things, because of interconnected systems. There are a few instances that I have done this naturally because it was overwhelming, but now that my attention has been drawn to it, I think it will be easier in the future.
@NuclearMex
@NuclearMex Жыл бұрын
Either tis solely the two of us or most Mechanical Engineering students suffer from this.
@JacopoSkydweller
@JacopoSkydweller Жыл бұрын
A good handful of my engineering buddies who are now post college, have way to many hobbies and got diagnosed later in life. Definitely not just us. I REALLY struggled with getting homework done until I started body doubling for stuff. You got this guy! HealthyGamer youtube channel has been very helpful in learning about ADHD and how to deal with it. @@NuclearMex
@Papepipucho
@Papepipucho 6 ай бұрын
So I play a lot of online games. Some games I have like 50-60 hotkeys including custom macros. Then I'd remap everything and have to learn everything again but doing it a different way - different key placements etc. I would simply clear everything and start with one. I would practice that one for a little while before adding a second. Then i would weave the two together and become more fluent in it. Then after i'd add 3, 4 etc. Putting things into practice is important, I think. I am open to change how I do things after each failure. After a session I would have memorized all the new key placements for the most part, of course it would take a little more practice to get super fluent after adding such a large amount but it didn't take very long for me. I've applied this approach to most things not just games ( i thought a game example would make more sense since the video used a game example) and I seem to retain things a lot easier doing that. Maybe its the stimuli of doing things in practice, or perhaps putting what you learned with the more complex parts that does it.
@binarymirror8534
@binarymirror8534 Жыл бұрын
It's neat to see how you describe the method I've been using for years.
@inkbythebarrelandpaperbyth6905
@inkbythebarrelandpaperbyth6905 Жыл бұрын
Most useful video on KZbin
@John-ng3pj
@John-ng3pj Жыл бұрын
Interesting video, and short and sweet. Thanks!
@ROBERUSAN
@ROBERUSAN Жыл бұрын
This is completly useful information for learning more conciously, thanks a lot.
@niheltouil7513
@niheltouil7513 Жыл бұрын
This is a valuable piece of advice. Will definitely be using it !
@akhilbisht798
@akhilbisht798 Жыл бұрын
Such a great advice. I will try this on coding. There are so much part involved that are interconnected in it like databases buisness logic, deployment, ci cd and all other thing i will now try to focus on one single part of it at a time
@Agent56000
@Agent56000 Жыл бұрын
Any update ? Did it help
@AEGIS-RED-MEGA-VIEWS
@AEGIS-RED-MEGA-VIEWS Жыл бұрын
@@Agent56000 learning coding takes so much time. we need to explore what we can do and then build with what we know. unless gpt is our friend
@marshallodom1388
@marshallodom1388 Жыл бұрын
Unless your learning to drive, then I'd use all the mirrors all the time. I've seen people who never use the rear view, but unless you're forced to not use it like a delivery truck, I'd incorporate it into your scanning of the spacial environment around you. But as far as games go I'll try this method out for sure.
@jangelbrich7056
@jangelbrich7056 Жыл бұрын
So the difference is between a free-and-erratic and a mentored-focused mind, but the latter is depending on a good mentor - which is hard to find. Both make progress over time, but the latter appears faster.
@simeoncox8336
@simeoncox8336 Жыл бұрын
I use this idea a lot, I just didn't know it. I will focus on one aspect of a skill, and if it's a game, I'll tell myself that I'm going to lose for the first few sessions, and that's okay as long as I get the one thing right. Then after awhile I'll actually try to win. But you have to accept that the other aspects of the game are going to be ignored at first. (Except, according to this study, you'd actually do better just by focusing on one thing anyway, which seems to be my experience).
@fahadus
@fahadus Жыл бұрын
This feels like a great tie in for that famous Bruce Lee quote: "I fear not the man who has practiced 10,000 kicks once, but I fear the man who has practiced one kick 10,000 times." Someone with more skill at a certain aspect should be overall better than someone who's just winging it entirely.
@carrycat876
@carrycat876 Жыл бұрын
great short video. will try it for sure
@UTJK.
@UTJK. Жыл бұрын
very interesting suggestion. Thanks for sharing.
@MathAdam
@MathAdam Жыл бұрын
I'm gonna try this to improve my driving. For the next 4 days, I'll ignore the brakes and steering wheel. I'll report back later on my progress. Off to the freeway!
@vladimirtsarapkin2840
@vladimirtsarapkin2840 Жыл бұрын
Such a meaningful content! I hope you will continue doing it and people will soon realise how cool this channel is!
@greenjupiter
@greenjupiter Жыл бұрын
Happy to find your channel ❤❤❤❤❤
@aaronag7876
@aaronag7876 Жыл бұрын
In the UK, Space fortress was called - Tempest and was on the Atari.
@Mynamewashere
@Mynamewashere Жыл бұрын
So the way to learn a skill that you can't easily brake down, is to find a way to break it down with your attention.
@marshallmykietyshyn4973
@marshallmykietyshyn4973 Жыл бұрын
Actually noticed this playing sports as well. Focusing on one skill for a few weeks until I noticed progress, then switching to a new skill produced much more noticeable results than trying to work on everything all the time. Didn't realize there was evidence backing this though.
@ykanama
@ykanama Жыл бұрын
Thanks man! Will experiment on this. Might help with my review:)
@bestopinion9257
@bestopinion9257 Жыл бұрын
Divide and conquer, repeat and don't forget, build upon that.
@orionred2489
@orionred2489 Жыл бұрын
If I may... I think the difficulty for doing this is knowing that you're going to short-change the OTHER aspects of the skill and being OK with that as an investment. As in, I'm going to get poor scores on this round of games because I'm going to solely concentrate on how my shots drop in this sniper game. So the NPCs will sneak up on me more, and I might get killed more, but that's OK for now.
@raybod1775
@raybod1775 Жыл бұрын
Great attitude! Good enough for now, do better next time.
@firebirdies
@firebirdies Жыл бұрын
Very inspiring!! Like how university curriculums and professional exams are structured
@mitchellreynolds4896
@mitchellreynolds4896 Жыл бұрын
Focusing on specific aspects of a skill helps in breaking it down and learning more effectively. When confronted with a complex skill, focus on one aspect at a time before integrating them
@AndreyOrochi
@AndreyOrochi Жыл бұрын
Loving the $9 kettle and great concepts
@elijahlair
@elijahlair Жыл бұрын
very insightful.Thanks
@cometx2313
@cometx2313 Жыл бұрын
This video was actually practical.. thankyou very much
@StudyingMachine-yg4th
@StudyingMachine-yg4th 7 ай бұрын
How interesting! Loved it!
@hassanadebambo9109
@hassanadebambo9109 Жыл бұрын
I really like the video. You just gain a new subscriber because of it!
@nowonmetube
@nowonmetube Жыл бұрын
Yeah it's what I experienced myself what should be obvious at this point: The saying goes practice makes perfect, but that doesn't mean you can't still do something for years and won't get significantly better. For instance if you "practice cooking" but you don't know what you're doing wrong, then you won't get much better at it. But if you practice cutting onions for example and practice frying, seasoning etc. all individually, then you get better quickly. ➡️ That's the reason why people suck even after playing the same game for years. They don't practice it, they do the same thing over and over.
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