@BetterCallMedhi Je partage totalement cette attitude, j’ai cette croyance (ou plutôt attitude de vie), disant que peu importe le domaine, tu peux toujours en tirer une « essence », un élément que tu pourras appliquer dans quelque chose, n’ayant rien à voir
@kepano Hello, is there a way to take all the web link in your obsidians vault and for each generate a static copy of the page ? Or do I need to do it manually?
Thanks for your amazing work !!
While watching through all of One Piece, I saved any time Toei drew a low quality picture of Chopper and these are the results (170+ Good Choppers)
🧵 1/44 🧵
7 minutes after you finish studying, your brain quietly runs a file-transfer process. Columbia scientists caught it on a brain scan, and repetition is what speeds it up.
In the study, 29 people went into an fMRI machine and saw flashcards pairing words with pictures. Some flashcards appeared once. Others appeared three times. After the flashcards, participants closed their eyes and rested for 7 minutes, still in the scanner, while the researchers watched what their brains did next.
The hippocampus (a seahorse-shaped chunk deep in your brain that handles new memories) replayed the flashcards at the same rate whether people had seen them once or three times. The scan showed no difference between the groups in that region.
Three other brain regions went the other way. All three belong to your brain's long-term storage network, the system that keeps memories around for years. Those regions replayed the repeated flashcards way more than the once-seen ones. One of them also started firing in sync with the hippocampus more often when replaying the repeated cards, like two colleagues confirming a file had been saved.
Textbooks describe memories moving from the hippocampus to long-term storage as a slow process, one that takes weeks, months, or sometimes years. This study caught that process starting within the first 7 minutes after closing your eyes, with repetition speeding it up dramatically.
When a flashcard had been shown three times, the long-term storage regions replayed the most recent viewing. Your brain treats each repetition as an update.
The hippocampus was doing its own kind of work. For the flashcards people saw only once, the more the hippocampus replayed them during that 7-minute rest, the more likely people were to remember them on the test afterward. The hippocampus was picking up the slack for the weaker memories, while the long-term regions took over the stronger ones.
The paper was edited by Robert Bjork at UCLA, the guy who coined "desirable difficulties," the idea that when learning feels harder in the moment, the memory tends to stick longer. This study adds a mechanism. Repetition works by moving a memory, fast, in the minutes right after you stop looking at the thing.
@FlorentGorgesFR D’où vient ce desamour? Peu de naissance et donc plus assez de jeunes? La concurrence des smartphones et consoles?
Un desamour des jeux de combats et d’arcade?
@lesnums hello je ne sais pas trop où demander j’ai un rasoir électrique et un réveil simulateur d’aube Philips qui viennent de lâcher. Le SAV ne répond pas. Quels services de réparation existe en France ou à Paris?
Merci d’avance
@OlivierRazemon@Mobilettre Oui mais ils faut prendre en comptes toutes les externalités même négatives: on voit bien le succès de l’offre. Et les économies qu’il y a sur l’entretien des routes, l’espace de parking économisé et sur la qualité de l’air… tout ça compense et justifie la mesure