Medical Mnemonics: Suggestions to S8 I
Transcription
Medical Mnemonics: Suggestions to S8 I
"""1 '" '. , '.~ .." ,. ~~E._2_QO~ .,.. "" "'1"1 ' if'"'I ',.", ! Qy " \ A~~.~;~;::;;;' Medical S 1 8 Imp Mnemonics: Suggestions I f Y S coo h IW 0 r k,:~;~~:~~:~:~:;::.:~ to 8 By Ronald P. Fisher, PhO the world the pterygomandibular raphe is or learning that the capitis inferior does not attach to the skull (I could have sworn it did). Who cares about those 7,486 persons in Johnny Carson's audience? Why doesn't sightful than they would like us to believe.) This article is a condensed treatment of some of the most effective mnemonics that can be used by medical students to alleviate their pursuit of drudgery. someone develop a technique that we can use for learning important facts and names, like the aryepiglottic fold? Fortunately, all is not lost. Psychologists, as well as ordinary people, have known for centuries about a host of mnemonics, or learning aids, that Since space is limited, only a few specific medical applications are presented. However, the indus-: trious reader should be able to construct his or her own mnemonics from the general guidelines provided. An expanded, more complete version of these medical mnemonics will be can assist us. Some of us tend to cast aspersions on these mne- available shortly in Fisher and Goldberg's Application of D rudgery is having to spend the next four years cramming an infinite number of Latin names-all of which have a minimum of 17 letters-into monics, claiming that they are merely tricks: They permit immediate learning, but the learning does not last over long periods of time-at least until Learning Theory to Medical Education. There are several universally effective techniques that can be applied at the time you are first...:,~':,,; your hippocampus. Or is it the reticular formation? Certainly there must be a painless method of learning all of those bones, muscles, nerve pathways, drugs, and so forth. What aoout those memory tricks I've seen what'shis-name do on "The Tonight Show,n where he remembers the names of 7,486 persons in five minutes? No, that's probably OK for remembering Seymour Goldman (see more gold, ., man?), but It will surely never work for remembering what in medical boards are completed. studying the material to help In actuality, however, most of consolidate your knowledge.~~.~". the mnemonics we know about However, even after you have.;. not only facilitate immediate completed your reading of the learning, but also facilitate textbook, there are some mainmemory over long durations. tenance devices that you can use Furthermore, the techniques to preserve the informat~on in described here not only have the your memory store. Finally, support of some insightful old there are some mental gymnaswives, but they have also been tested empirically under rigorous laboratory controls. (When The author is .-.Professor, P~Chol?t gy, M Fl forid ja these laboratory controls are imD r epartment o ll U .nternatjona mcerSJ!/. am . plemented, some old wives Flolida. prove to be considerably les.'iin- ..obliquus .::~~:;-.~~~;::; '.' ." " .:":'~~.;i;:.:::;;; ";'?'~';:~~~;~:,.:,: .' ' ;'. " " .-:i :;:.f'\;...::.:.:.;'::J .:~":::"j' '."i :.:~ .: .~.,~ .~;;: ":':;-'. ., .t :-,:,.!,.:.! .-- I :;"/" : i .~-~..1 , ;.-.~,.~-:1 ~~~~~::::~;1:~1 .-.:,::~~:. ' : , ~ I ".. J .:~ 1 : I i .'.1 ". \. -' I , I I. '; 16 '111,/,,"1/)1" ,.,/ ."11/1"1"" 1'11111 ., '. .' ; tics that you can perform while ceive the interrelation among may be more personally .~ . -" .. .:-:.' , .. mean- .- taking an exam to help retrieve the learned information. I shall treat these in turn. the component parts, will facilitate your learning and remembering the individual components. The opposite kind of ingful to you. In fact, the more relevant you make the material to your personal experiences,the more e~fectiveyour learning will , ,,::...~c: - Organization There are three basic principIes of learning that everyone can and should apply when studying text material: organization, chunking, and imagery. Perhaps the most useful is organization, namely, understanding how various facts are just different manifestations of one learning, rote learning, in which each fact is learned as an isolated unit, has the simplistic appeal of not requiring that one learn additional information, namely, the abstract principle be.4 For exa~ple, if the spatial array of the bones in the wrist is very similar to a favorite abstract painting of yours, use the painting as an idiosyncratic technique to organize the wrist bones. Since the painting has personal meaning for you, it is very unlikely that you will ~.;~:::~~i:~~'fr :,;,":,~,:";:::';:': ;~:: .:~~: j~":: ..:;~,-::: ..;.',i~.":."l.':;~:.::. ..;~~: .: ::~f:; b .. asic pnn~IP.e. I F Th I or examp e, a general pnnclple of muscle anatomy is that "when two muscles o~erlap one another and run in parallel, the shorter muscles tend to lie deeper."! Learning this one general principle obviates the need to memorize the depth of each muscle separately. Instead, you are left with the simpler task of learning the general principle and the few exceptions. Another form of the mnemonic principle of organization is to understand how various facts are conceptually related to one another, around some common function. In the medical domain, note that the various parts of the body are organized around functional systems(e.g., the nervous system) or subsysterns (e.g., the autonomic nervous system), with common goals and principles. Learning the material in this fashion, through an organizing system, will prove to be more effective than trying to memorize a set of randomly ordered facts by rote. In general, organized learning, in which the goal is to perStudent DOctor. Summer 1986 e th ree b .forget a8tC ...e:e pnn~ples oj learmng are organization, chunking, and imagery around which the various facts can be organized. Therefore, if you try to learn the material by rote memory, it will seem as if there were less to learn. However, you will soon find that, as the number of facts increases, rote learning becomesmore and more difficult. By comparison,. organized learning is relatively unaffected by the number of facts that must be remembered.2 Furthermore, facts learned under a rote systemwill be forgotten faster than those learned around some organizing principIe. Therefore, the time spent learning the organizing scheme will more than payoff in the long run, especially if there are many related facts to be learned. 3 You should feel free either to use the organizational scheme employed by your textbook or professor or to develop one that it over th the f next h ore, you s. few ld ou '::.. . , ". years; :to~:~ k m~ .°... e use . ;~;";;t:;;;~~.:, of Its mnemornc potentIal. In practical terms, this means that you will have to search actively for some of these organizing principles, especially the idiosyncratic ones, since they will not be presented directly in the text or lecture. This will undoubtedly require more effort when studying on your part, but, in the long run, developing an effective organizing scheme will promote more efficient use of your time. Chunking :. The second general learning mnemonic is chunking, or abbreviation. It is based on the intuitive.precept that it is easierto learn one fact than many facts. Thus, the goal of all chunking mnemonics is to reduce the total number of pieces of information to be learned. This can be done in a variety of ways. Probably the most common method is to combine the initial letters of several related words to form one organizing word. For exampIe, the three leg muscles that are responsible for plantar flex- ::~::':;'~"i~.~!: :,.:::-:~i-:.:: . ! !. t;:,~:~.:_i;':{~:~ ::.:i:~:--::':..:;:. ~.~~~'£;t':f:::; '."... :.:::.':'~"i::I~.:. ~.!j;~~~ ~;.,~t~~;. 17 -°. '". :. --."\ , ..' , -.:.",.~ ~-- ion of the ankle are the GaSP (gastrocnemius, soleus, and plantaris); and the suprahyoid muscles, a rather messy affair, ..always SMuDGe (stylohyoid, mylohyoid, digastric, and geniohyoid). As a last example, note how the layers of the SCALP (skin, connective tissue, aponeurotic layer, looseconnective tissue, and pericranium) take the drudgery Ot¥ of learn,.ing all by themselves. ,~,~~:~-,?'. This specific technique will be most. helpful. when you a~e ,t';'~:": learrnng short hsts of three to SIX , related concepts. Longer sequences will often not lend themselves neatly to the formation of convenient words. Yoa can sometimes circumvent this problem, however, simply by making up a short two- or threeword phrase with the available I letters. For example, to remem"':_~~"! ber the muscles involved in " , :!j;;'~:\:~,J chewing, think about chewing :c..:: properly when eating a MeaT ,::-7: MeaL-the chewing musclesare the masseter,temporalis, medial ~.~~ pterygoid, and lateral ptery:::-';...; goid. If the letters do not fit "_!"':! neatly into a short two- or three.'::~' '; word phrase, try a slightly \ longer meaningful sentence.For '. .1 example, to remember the car...' ~j pal bones, use Goldberg'slrisque :,.::7:;'::1 sentence: Scared lovers try posi, ..i tions that they cannot handle -.: (scaphoid, lunate, triquetrum, ; pisiform, trapezium, trapezoid, ; capitate, hamate). .; These chunking mnemonics '. j will prove useful if you are given j the mnemonic or can construct ! one without much effort. If an ! appropriate chunking mneI monic does not come to mind ~~ 18 quickly, however, it is probably a waste of precious time to spend too long trying to construct one. Imagery The third helpful rule of learning mnemonics is to try to incorporate visual imagery. Psychologists know that pictures are easier to remember than words, and that instructing people to centrate on the mental image you are constructing. Keep the~~;~;::~ image in mind for five to ten sec-:!;:,;~:.:.;,-onds before proceeding to the new learning. Images learned in this fashion will virtually never be forgotten. More frequent, but shorter d' stu y ses~ons are more efficient than fewer long sessions try to mentally picture events improves their learning.s Therefore, when you create your own mnemonic, try to generate one that is easily visualized, as opposed to one that is abstract. There is a myth that the more bizarre the image is, the easierit is to remember. It has beendemonstrated, however, that bizarre images are no easier to remember than ordinary images.6,.j" Therefore, just construct an image that is clear and not terribly confusing. Next, make sure that you visually imagine the scenario you have just constructed. That is, you must actually seeit, not just think about it. For example, in the GaSP mnemonic just mentioned, try to mentally picture a man standing on tiptoe (plantar ankle flexion) and gasping. You will find this easiestto do if you simply close your eyesand con- Overlearning Now that you have learned the material thoroughly, what can you do to prevent yourself from forgetting all of those facts? One obvious solution is;:;i~.f,.;~~ simply to rere~.dthe text. .'~ut," you may ask, how many times can I read the same material? I have already memorized it perfectly." First, there is no such thing as having learned something perfectly. Even when you think you have memorized a passageperfectly, you can profit from further study (overlearning). How can you know something better than ..perfectly"? Need I remind you of all those occasions when you thought you knew the material perfectly after having.~~~~. read it, but drew a blank when the test question appeared? "OK, so I'll read the text a few times. Shorter Study Sessions Does it make a difference when I schedule these learning sessions,or is ten hours of studying the same whether I do it in two five-hour sessions or five two-hour sessions?"It definitely doesmake a difference. Youwill almost always find that more frequent, but shorter, study sessions are more efficient than fewer long sessions.(This is particularly true in learning isolated units of information, like Stud!.'nt DOctor. .')'ummcr 1986 ~ ..' -: ... ~" .': :, , , .:.'" ,..' -; specific names. Larger groupings of conceptually related material will require longer sessions, since you will have to learn not only the details, but also how the material is conceptually organized.) In fact, you will probably find that, if you schedule the sessionsproperly, you can learn more in less total time. For example, you are likely to learn more by scheduling four one-hour sessions than in one massive five-hour session. In general, I recommend studying for not much more than one and a half hours before taking a break. Before you leave the studying for your break, it is a good idea to- mentally review what you have just read, just for a few minutes, since that will help to consolidate your knowledge of the material. Periodic Review One of the most effective techniques that you can employ to retard the forgetting of learned material is to periodically review it mentally. That is, recall to mind, every once in a while, some of the knowledge you have acquired in the past few days. This does not have to be a formal session, but can be incorporated into the little bits of time that we have free every day, as when waiting for a traffic light, taking a shower, or sitting through a TV commercial. The act of trying to retrieve this knowledge will effectively strengthen it-even more than an additional study session7and will also serve to warn you, before the examination, of areas StudentDOctor. Summer 1986 in which you need more review. Testyourself, or have a friend test you on the material you have learned. This should be done not only just before a major examination, but on a regular basis. This self-quizzing also serves as a knowledgestrengthening device. Again, as with the mental reviews, you can work thesemini-quizzes into -.: ., -." .or Test yourself on matenal you have just learnedthis self-quizzing is also a knowledge-strengthening d .were ev~ce help dredge up all that stored knowledge when it is required, as in examinations? Part of the solution will depend on how you learned the material. If it was learned in rote fashion, then an effective retrieval technique is to try to mentally reconstruct the physical and psychologic context in which you originally learned the material.s For example, try to remember where you were studying, whether in the library at your kitchen table, when you originally learned the material; or, try to remember what mood you were in at the time, if you were happy or even if you tired or upset. If you learned the material by -..;;' :,' .:" -0 ~ :. 0 ~!;~::;.' "..~, -0 -::'~~ ",;'.:: .:,~~". ~o ,.:":~:':~~ , '.;':z::~~ ~~~,~., .:~~~ .:~~~c:' ,;;;i\;~~;-:~;: :;7;~':;f1.:~" : -", ,.:' , ..'" . those little bits of time that would normally be wasted. As a final, very powerful but somewhat time-consuming preventive against forgetting, try to prepare a lecture on the learned material. You don't have to actually give the lecture to an audience; you can present it to your bedroom wall with equal organizing it around some meaningful concept, then, in addition to reconstructing the original learning context, you can often figure out the desired information from your knowledge of the related material.9 That is, you can sometimes figure out how a component of a system works by knowing how the other components of the systern operat~ and by knowing the .0 !. .:::' \. I I I ~:;:~;;:":;:: ;:-,,:,:;.:,::::-, ~'::i~;:l;;:;.::: :',:'-:;:::~i' : .-- effectiveness.However, you will no doubt find that the act of preparing a lecture will force you to organize the material and will thereby consolidate it. All teachers will testify that they know the lecture material more thoroughly after having presented it than before. (There's probably something about making a fool of yourself in front of your students that alsoservesasa powerful motivator.) Retrieving Information Finally, what can be done to goal of the System.For example, knowing that flexors and extensors work in pairs will allow you to figure out the function of the biceps brachii (elbow flexion) if you know that it is paired with the triceps (elbow extension). Note that this ability to figure out or construct knowledge from related information, as opposed' to simply memorizing it, can be attained only when you have originally learned the inform ation as an organized set of interrelated facts. When you learn the information in rote fashion, I I c,; ~~~",: :~;~~~/~~-; .-"",. .. 19 ... .-., .,0, . ..' .. ~ i ,-, '. .;. you f ~:;'~i:;~:-:.,:\ .':' cannot rom later 1k genera Summar y As quick a effective construct 1 d now e it quent long sessions. To minimize .HierarchIcal orgettmg, try to rehearse mentally at intervals during the day. y Finall refresher, learning .3. Bo,;er GH" Clark MC, Lesgold A)'I, et al: retrIeval schemesin recall of categorized word lists. Journal of Verbal Learning and.::..~ Verbal Behavior 1969;8:323-343. f ge. the most techniques duce are when Y OU need to P ro- 4. RogersTB, Kui.per NA, Kirker. \\'s: Sel.f-ref- , erence and the encoding of personallnformauon. the information, construct the try. original to re- learning 5. Paivio A: Holt, Rinehart ..York. those that (lookmg tween .: Ing use for organIzatIon facts) be- chunking total (reduc- Information codes), ( constructmg -:." mo r e studying h ;;, .'.. sort, to related help figure and make general out use of 6 knowledge the . 1 answer. c ear me.nta g enerall is material ...1. effIcIentl y is done . sessIons h rat y t If .' m an Verbal A Scientut n aI . f YSIS 0 Processes. 1971; a mnemOniC f and the paradox of interference. chology 1978;10:438-464. re- SOMA Cognitice Psy- vance. J Exp 1983;9:130-138. Psychol [Learn Member Benefits . "" ,..:... ; :-~..:.:;'; ...; : 1. .~;:"::.: :'7~i.. : .-.'::.t.,. :"::.~'; Subscription to: Student DOctor Student scholarships 3. 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Smith EE, Adams N, Schorr D: Fact retrie,'al I "";: ' d . 1970;58:496-510. "I ":,f... New 102-103. Geiselman RE, Fisher RP, ~lacKinnon DP, et al: Eyewitness memory enhancement in the police intervi~'v: Cognitive retrieval mnemonics versus hypnotISm. J Appl P31jchoI1985;70:401-412. 9' FIShernn . aI "" Cuervo A :" ' I emory for phYSIC features of discourse as a function of their rele- References Goldberg S: CliniCal Anatomy ,\fade Rld,culowl y Simp le. Miami, MedMaster, 1984; 26. but h er GH and & Winston, 1971;10:562-567. .8. Im- learned in frequent ower: Imagery 7. Hogan RM, Kintsch W: Differential effects of study and test trials on long-term recognition and recall. Journal of Verbal Learning and Behacior imagery 1 B American Into and a ges) .The .~: any " smaller , environment mterrelations J Pers Soc PsychoI1977;35:677-688. "II/.I""IIII),I"'."""""",I'II'f. "'Ie,n Cogn]