Ideas so far:
- chunking: works sorta well, requires upfront cost to learn the concept, another cognitive cost to use the concept properly, and remember to do so in-context.
- DNB: not much, if any.
- spaced repetition: I said "working" memory.
- writing things down: helpful, has time and depth costs, unclear how useful it is for learning new things.
- whiteboards, notebooks, etc: Somewhat helpful, but has similar problems as writing, plus it doesn't help as much when trying to grok a concept / know when to apply it.
- just-in-time knowledge systems: I'm trying to build an incredibly-hokey "concept database" to do a bit of this. The main problem is still usually "knowing which thing applies to a given problem", plus the above problems with writing things down.
As usual with my threads on this sort of topic, this is looking for wacky/anti-inductive/risky methods only.
Connect a stack style memory register to a pair of peripheral neurons, so that the neurons can send three separable nerve signals (push one, push zero, pop) and receive two separable inputs from the machine (pop one, pop zero)
Leave it connected for an extended period of time so that neuroplasticity can adapt to having a sense organ that is a low metabolic cost, fast binary storage device, might be worth trying a lot of double n back so the body adapts to using the new organ, and as a bonus, you'll get quantitative proof if it works.
Congrats, you're a superintelligence.
If I remember correctly, something like this was done in a rat and measurably improved water maze performance.
I went looking and couldn't find it, but here's something newer and probably more useful: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-020-58831-9
Neuralink has described the bandwidth they're seeking as similar to the corpus callosum. I don't think that's actually necessary to achieve superhuman results. The brain is good at adding new sense organs (see research on vibrating belts, cameras attached to tongues, whiskers on finger etc). I presume that the brain is also good at linking to 'more brain'. So, a low bandwidth interface, possibly only a few periphe... (read more)