How to become a Memory Champion (Part 4)

Posted by on June 15, 2009 in Memory Techniques, News | 11 comments

It’s been twelve weeks after the first episode of How to become a Memory Champion. Since then you learned how to use the method of loci, to make good associations and to create your Major System. Make sure you read the previous episodes because they contain relevant information to understand this article. Today we will focus on the technique how to memorize a deck of cards – the ultimate memory discipline.

Memorizing Cards

Memory athletes during Speed Cards

Memory athletes during Speed Cards

If you have ever watched a top memory athlete memorizing a deck of cards, you probably understand the astonishment about this action. Compared to all of the other championship disciplines you actually see what’s going on: The competitor is rushing through the 52 cards in his or her hands, getting only a glimpse of each of them. After an out-of-the-world short time the stopwatch is being clicked and the athlete goes into some kind of meditation, recalling all the images which have been created a few seconds ago. More and more athletes around the world are able to memorize a deck of cards in five minutes or less. 166 competitors (June 2008) already have proven to do this in an official championship in the lasts years. On top of all this Speed Cards is always the last discipline at a tournament and therefore the most exciting one. Many athletes have taken the lead in this very last round.

The Different Card Systems

Speed Cards is the ultimate discipline in Memory Sports

Speed Cards is the ultimate discipline in Memory Sports

Other than the number systems you will most certainly not start with a cluster for your card images. To refresh your memory, a cluster is containing a few information stored in one image. Due to the 52 cards in a poker deck, a 1st-level system is much more elaborate than its little brother for 10 numbers. You’ll need at least 52 pegs to translate each card into a different image. There are many different approaches to create them.

The easiest one I know (as long as you don’t already have a Major System) was created by Steffen Bütow (former German Speed Cards record with 45.82 seconds at the North German Championship in 2003). It categorizes the four colours into four categories and than uses a number-form system to translate the cards. Because it is very intuitive and based on visual associations, you will be able to memorize it in a few hours.

Another approach is by using the Major System (or any other system you used as a 2nd-level number system). You just take those images and use it for the cards, too. By doing that you don’t have to learn any new images. I will explain this approach in detail below.

Then there are a few simple cluster systems like person-object (PO), person-verb (PV) and person-verb-object (PVO). For those you create your first 52 pegs with the system of your choice and then extend it to 104 or even 156 pegs and more with natural associations. The most evolved system for cards was created by the actual World Memory Champion Ben Pridmore and is a true 2nd-level card system.

The 1st-Level System

072976-orange-white-pearl-icon-alphanumeric-n1-solidAlthough there are several cluster systems for cards I will start with a simple 1st-level system. It is relatively easy to learn. Since we already created a Major System in the last episode we will use it now for cards, too. The advantage is that you don’t have to create and memorize 52 new images. Another benefit is that each time you train either number or cards you also train your images for the other discipline. The downside is that you have a smaller variety in images which probably could influence the clearness of your mental pictures. In my case it doesn’t!

If you look at the logic behind the 52 cards you realize that there are many numbers among them which makes it easy to use the Major System.

Let us assign our Major pegs now to the cards: If you look at the logic behind the 52 cards you realize that there are many numbers among them which makes it easy to use the Major System. The thirteen cards of each colours are divided into the numbers two to nine, the Jack, the Queen, the King and the Ace.

  1. We divide the 52 cards into the four colours and sort them. Personally I ordered the four colours like their worth in the German card game “Skat” which is Diamonds, Hearts, Spades and Clubs. But you should order them as you like.
  2. If we use the Ace as the number one we have a perfect order from Ace to King regarding the natural numbers for nine of the thirteen cards.
  3. There are now different approaches:
    1. We assign the cards logically to our Major pegs. What I did is to use the Diamonds Ace to ten for the numbers 01-10. Now I do a trick: Instead of breaking the great congruence of the numbers by using the digits 11-13 for Jack, Queen and King, I switch now to Hearts. Hence I assign 11-20 with Ace of Hearts to ten of Hearts followed by Spades for 21-30 and Clubs for 31-40. Those first 40 cards are easily allocated and memorized. Each time you see the six of Spades you will remember that Spades is in the 20s and therefore it must be your number 26! Quite easy so far.Now to the tricky part: 41-43 will become the persons of Diamonds, 44-46 the persons of Hearts, 47-49 the persons of Spades and 50-52 the persons of Clubs. Those last 12 cards are not very intuitive and easy to learn, but nevertheless not that difficult after all.
    2. Alternatively you can assign the persons of Hearts to 51-53, the persons of Spades to 61-63 and the persons of Clubs to 71-73.
    3. Another approach would be by assigning all Diamonds to 1-13, all Hearts to 21-33, all Spades to 41-53 and all Clubs to 61-73. You should decide which way makes more sense to you. Maybe you come up with another way of using your Major System. Like everything in memory techniques you should find the way you like best.

Maybe you already realized it by yourself: Your handsome 2nd-level number system had just been reduced to a simple 1st-level card system!

The 1.5-Level System

Cambridge_2009_13

In Speed Cards you recall with a second deck of cards

After you created your 1st-level system and used it a bit you will find out that it is quite an effort to memorize a deck of cards. The reason for this is because of the fact that you don’t use any clusters whatsoever. You just assigned one image for each card. Therefore you need 52 journey points on your elephant path to memorize the whole deck. With numbers you could already memorize 104 digits with the same amount of locations.

A great way to improve your system is by creating a cluster for your cards. An easy solution is the PO (PV, PVO) System. To be perfectly correct it is actually not a proper cluster because you don’t increase the amount of data per image. What you do is to increase the amount of data per story and therefore per location. The first thing you might come up with is to use more than one image on each journey point. But that is very risky because you could forget the correct order. By using 52 persons and 52 objects you will always know that the person comes first and the object comes second. It doesn’t matter in which order you remember them.

Creating a PO System is extremely intuitive and easy to memorize because you use your own natural associations.

Creating that list is extremely intuitive and easy to memorize because you use your own natural associations: If your number 40 (ten of Clubs) is RoSe (object) than your natural association could be Sleeping Beauty (person). If your 23 is NeMo (person) your object could be a submarine. It is so easy that you wont really have to memorize it at all. You just have to come up with your best associations once, write it down and you will realize that it is still there the next time you are recalling it. If it is not popping into your head immediately there might be a better image for you.

Instead of objects you can also use actions (verbs). Some athletes (including myself) are using a PVO System with all three lists. You could go even further and add as many other different lists you want.

The memorization process is slightly different to your normal stories because you will have to combine at least three elements with each other: the person, the object and your location. Make sure you clearly distinguish between all of your persons. Otherwise you will just remember that someone was dancing with a microphone on your bed. Each person should get at least one unique attribute like a huge belly, a beard or a hat. That’s all and you already saved 50% of your locations.

But there is also a downside to this system: As more lists you use, it exponentially reduces your creativity and increases the necessity for a very clear and good story. And that takes precious time which you don’t have in a memory competition. Therefore I would not suggest to go any further as a PVO System. And even this is already very limited because the whole story is defined by the order of the pegs. I already started to train PV instead of PVO (which I was using for about four years) because I like the freedom in creativity. But this is another question of personal interest. If you go for a 1.5-level system you should start with PO (or PV) and slowly upgrade the system to your needs and skill if necessary.

The 2nd-Level System

072978-orange-white-pearl-icon-alphanumeric-n2-solidBen Pridmore was the first athlete with a true 2nd-level card system. It creates a proper cluster by combining two cards to one image. For doing this you need 52×51=2652 images, which is a massive amount of pegs. And this system is for cards only! Actually I don’t really know how Ben (or Simon Reinhard and Dennis Müller) created and memorized this system. I will ask one of them and report it in an upcoming episode. But you get the point: It is an extremely powerful system and much more evolved than its smaller brothers. Even PVO is in my opinion far less sophisticated.

Nevertheless I would nobody recommend this system except you aim for the memory crown. And even then you can do it with a smaller system. Three times World Memory Champion Andi Bell memorized a deck of cards in 31.16 seconds with a PVO-System (156 pegs). But on the other hand have a look at the two top scores in Speed Cards: Ben Pridmore with 26.28 and Simon Reinhard with 27.36 seconds each of them using a 2nd-level system. I quote chief arbiter Phil Chambers:

Phil Chambers: I believe that technique wins out over natural memory most of the time.

That’s it for today. I hope you found this article useful to create your own system for cards. Please feel free to use the comments for any questions, critic or different point of views. And to give you a little insight in the practical use of your new system, I add Simon Reinhard’s national record in Speed Cards. Watch it, love it, learn it!

Awesome Memory: German Speed Cards Record from Flauwy on Vimeo.

South German Memory Champion Simon Reinhard is memorizing a deck of cards in 27.36 seconds and creates a new German record. See this marvelous accomplishment with your own eyes.

Learn the techniques yourself – it is easy and fun. Everyone can do it!

11 Comments

  1. Hello Florian!

    Great article, as always.

    It is amazing how you manage to nearly seamlessly combine a professional presentation, a relaxed and at the same time focused language and an uncanny talent to find (or even create?) those incredibly fitting images.

    It is always a pleasure to read articles like this one from a pro like you :) .

    By the way, the only one to have truely memorized his system is Dennis. Ben and I have each made our own code (while I think that his concept is quite profoundly different from mine) and let our associations flow as far as the code, granting a sufficient freedom, allowed, After that it is only practicing since the association is firm: It is the first one that comes to mind when “reading” the code.

    There was and is absolutely no tiresome memorization involved (perhaps a relaxed one, sometimes when you train Speed Cards on the web, when the trial is over and you check the cards and go slowly through them, making some image a bit clearer and more lively and make a connection a bit stronger here and there. But that’s it :) ).

    Thanks again, you made the world of memory sports richer by creating this marvelous piece of art that you call memory-sports.com.

    Regards,

    Simon Reinhard

    • Avatar of Flauwy

      Those are very kind words, Simon. I am glad that you enjoy my website and think of it as a piece of art. That makes me really happy because I put a lot of effort into the whole design of each single article.

      I didn’t create most of the icons I use myself. In the last dozen articles I used mainly free images from Icons Etc. (There is a link under the credits). They created a huge amount of beautiful Icons and I love to use them for this Blog.

      On the other hand am I creating all the images myself, like each article header and all the pictures I use.

      • nobody comments on your blog?

        • Avatar of Flauwy

          Sometimes they do and sometimes they don’t. (time)

    • Simon please explain your card system in detail..
      This will make memory-sports.com look more good.

  2. This is another great article! And that video is just awesome! Congratulations again, Simon! :smile:

    • Ben,
      What are your images for-

      KD/8H,QS/KH,10S/JC
      QS/QD,KD/KH,10S/10C
      KS/KC,6H/7C/JS/JC .

  3. It’s no wonder that the blog is totally awesome, if someone has such a great potential (and such an adorable girlfriend) like Florian does! (devil)

  4. :ninja: I tried to invent a coupple of new systems, to start some new discussions.

    so i thought about a “steno” version for speedcards,
    a route-method. a big route-metho and a colour-feelings-major system for the cards.

    http://www.brainboard.eu/phpbb/viewtopic.php?p=13645#13645

    I think I will rewrite them in english next week.

  5. Thanks for your articles Florian. Very useful to me.

    I come from the speedcubing community (we solve rubik’s cube as fast as possible) and my favorite event is the Blindfolded one. That is, memorize the cube as fast as possible and then solve it blindfolded. That is why I am highly interrested in memorization.

    By the way, I saw in the video that Simon Reinhard was close to failed. As a cuber I train hard the finger speed and dexterity. I am wondering if some serious dexterity training with cards could have prevented it. (think)

    Anyway, very astonishing Simon (performance in the video) and, Florian, very high quality website as well as content.

    Micaël

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