![]() Given the time commitment required to thoroughly review this deck, it is not recommended to work through more than 50 new cards a day. Unlike cloze deletion cards, which just make you “fill in the blank,” you will have to dedicate some time to understanding and remembering the information on these cards. As a result, the deck is extremely slow-moving, as it covers some very low-yield topics. The cards in this deck aren’t simple recall cards-some of them are difficult and require you to think critically, and some contain practice problems. This is a deck you can use about 5 months out from your official MCAT test date to make sure that you are adequately working through important material. This MCAT Anki deck is an extremely comprehensive MCAT resource, and generally very well made. It also contains flashcards for the official AAMC practice exams, in their own category. This deck contains 5978 cards, arranged by MCAT content sections : Chemistry/Physics, Biology/Biochemistry, Psychology/Sociology. The jacksparrow2048 deck is one of the most used Anki MCAT decks out there, and a great MCAT study resource. This MCAT Anki deck was created by user jacksparrow2048 on Reddit, which the creator used to score a 527 on their official MCAT exam. So… which of the best MCAT Anki decksone should you use? Many MCAT test-takers use the spaced repetition flashcard application called Anki, and generally use premade flashcard “decks.” There are a lot of these Anki MCAT decks, created by various people on various MCAT forums, each with its own pros and cons. Quick Bayes Table, by alexvermeer. A simple deck of cards for internalizing conversions between percent, odds, and decibels of evidence.How to Make the Most of the UWorld MCAT QBank Using the Cloze Deletion Concept.Mysterious Answers to Mysterious Questions, by divia.Eliezer Yudkowsky’s “Twelve Virtues of Rationality”, by alexvermeer.Tim Ferriss’s The Four Hour Work Week, by alexvermeer.Richard Wiseman’s 59 Seconds, by Dorikka.An experimental deck for getting yourself motivated using the advice from Piers Steel’s The Procrastination Equation and the author’s own How to Get Motivated poster. David Burns’s The Feeling Good Handbook, by Pablo.Carol Dweck’s Mindset: The New Psychology of Success, by alexvermeer.Rationality Habits Checklist, by Qiaochu_Yuan.Based on Wikipedia’s List of cognitive biases and List of fallacies. List of Cognitive Biases and Fallacies, by phob.Peter Gray’s Psychology (6th ed.) (incomplete), by Pablo.From Theodore Millon’s Personality Disorders in Modern Life. List of personality disorders, by Pablo.Contains cards for the sounds associated with 0 through 9 as well as 100 pegs. The Major Mnemonic Memory System, by alexvermeer.Based on Piotr Wozniak’s 20 Rules of Formulating Knowledge. How to Formulate Knowledge, by alexvermeer.10 Rules for Dealing with the Police, by divia.Stephen LaBerge & Howard Rheingold’s Exploring the World of Lucid Dreaming, by divia. ![]() MAPS’s Responding to Difficult Psychedelic Experiences, by divia.Marshall Rosenberg’s Nonviolent Communication, by divia.Kerry Patterson, Joseph Grenny, Ron McMillan & Al Switzle’s Crucial Conversations, by divia.Adele Faber & Elaine Mazlish’s How to Talk So Kids Will Listen and Listen So Kids Will Talk, by divia.Ear Training (chords), by Pablo. Contains sound samples of about 40 of the most common chords, in root position.100 Greatest Paintings of All Time, by Risto_Saarelma. Based on lukeprog‘s listology, itself based on Piero Scaruffi’s 1000 Greatest Western Paintings of All Times.Google Docs keyboard shortcuts (Mac), by Pablo .Chrome keyboard shortcuts (Windows), by Pablo.Nick Bostrom’s Superintelligence , by Pablo.Mark Piper’s Accounting Made Simple , by Pablo.Ivo Welch’s Corporate Finance (2nd ed.) (incomplete), by Pablo.To prevent further loss of content, I have now uploaded all of the extant decks to my server and added backup links to these archived versions. Fortunately, I managed to regenerate almost all of these decks from my own master deck. Update (August 2019): The links to many of the decks below died in the intervening years, in part because AnkiWeb deletes shared decks with low download activity. Please note that I have excluded some of my own Anki decks, which may not be of interest to members of the LessWrong community all such decks may be found here. (Anki is arguably the most popular spaced repetition software.) If you know of a deck not included here, please mention it in the comments section and I’ll add it to the list. In a recent LessWrong post, Qiaochu Yuan noted that “various mnemonic techniques like memory palaces, along with spaced repetition, seem to more or less solve the problem of memorization.” The list below is an attempt to compile all existing Anki decks created by Less Wrong users, in the hope that they will be of help to others in memorizing the corresponding material.
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