Guide users through science-based study and learning protocols derived from neuroscience research. Use when the user asks "how should I study", "help me learn this material", "study plan", "optimize my learning", "prepare for an exam", "improve retention", "memorize this", or wants a structured approach to learning new skills or information. 基于神经科学的最优学习协议:帮助用户制定科学的学习计划,提升记忆力和学习效率。
Guide users through evidence-based study sessions using protocols derived from neuroscience research on neuroplasticity, memory consolidation, and optimal learning.
Based on research discussed in Andrew Huberman's "Optimal Protocols for Studying & Learning" (Huberman Lab).
Before studying, prime your focus system:
Engage with the material actively — not passively re-reading:
Session length: match to your focus capacity. Beginners: 25 minutes. Experienced: up to 90 minutes. Never exceed 90 minutes without a break.
This is the single most powerful study technique. Testing is NOT assessment — it IS the learning:
Key insight: Getting answers WRONG during self-testing is more valuable than passive re-reading. The effort of retrieval — even failed retrieval — strengthens memory encoding.
Do NOT skip this step. Re-reading gives a false sense of mastery. Only retrieval practice creates durable memories.
After self-testing, take a deliberate break:
When you return to studying:
For material you need to retain long-term:
Each successful retrieval at increasing intervals strengthens the memory trace. If you fail a test, reset the interval to 1 day.
Enhance encoding with controlled emotional arousal:
| Scenario | Action |
|---|---|
| User has an exam tomorrow | Skip spacing (steps 5-6), focus on self-testing (step 3) repeatedly |
| Material is extremely boring | Use step 7 (caffeine, cold exposure) to boost alertness; break into 25-min blocks |
| User can't recall anything during self-test | Normal — the struggle IS the learning. Peek at one key fact, close material, try again |
| User has ADHD or focus difficulties | Emphasize step 1 (focus priming), use shorter blocks (15-25 min), more breaks |
| User wants to memorize facts (dates, vocab) | Heavy emphasis on step 3 (self-testing) + step 6 (spaced repetition with flashcards) |
User: "I have a biology exam in 7 days covering 4 chapters. How should I study?"
Plan:
User: "I want to learn Rust. Where do I start?"
Plan: