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Incremental reading

 
Literary Dictionary: incremental repetition

incremental repetition, a modern term for a device of repetition commonly found in ballads. It involves the repetition of lines or stanzas with small but crucial changes made to a few words from one to the next, and has an effect of narrative progression or suspense. It is found most often in passages of dialogue, as in the traditional Scottish ballad, ‘Lord Randal’:

‘What d' ye leave to your mother, Lord Randal, my son?
What d'ye leave to your mother, my handsome young man?
’‘Four and twenty milk kye; mother, mak my bed soon,
For I'm sick at the heart, and I fain wad lie down.’
‘What d' ye leave to your sister, Lord Randal, my son?
What d' ye leave to your sister, my handsome young man?
’‘My gold and my silver; mother, mak my bed soon,
For I'm sick at the heart, and I fain wad lie down.’

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Poetry Glossary: Incremental Repetition
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The repetition in each stanza

Wikipedia: Incremental reading
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Incremental reading is a method for learning and retaining information from reading that might otherwise be forgotten. It is particularly targeted to people who are trying to learn a large amount of information at once, particularly if that information is varied.

Incremental reading is based on psychological principles of long term memory storage and retrieval, in particular the spacing effect.

Information is broken into chunks, and an algorithm (usually computer software) organises the user's reading and calculates the ideal time for the reader to review each chunk. The method itself is often credited to the Polish software developer Piotr Wozniak. Wozniak's SuperMemo is currently the only implementation of incremental reading (as opposed to simply spaced repetition of questions and cloze deletions etc.).

Method

With Incremental reading, a load of material is subdivided into articles and its extracts. All articles and extracts are processed according to the rules of spaced repetition. This means that all processed pieces of information are presented at increasing intervals. Individual articles are read in portions proportional to the attention span, which depends on the user, his mood, the article, etc.

The name "incremental" comes from "reading in portions". Without the use of spaced repetition, the reader would quickly get lost in the glut of information when studying dozens of subjects at the same time. However, spaced repetition makes it possible to retain traces of the processed material in memory. Incremental reading makes it possible to read hundreds of articles at the same time with a substantial gain to attention.

For incremental reading to leave a permanent mark in long-term memory, the processed material must be gradually converted into material based on active recall. This means that extracts such as "George Washington was the first U.S. President" must be changed to questions such as "Who was the first U.S. President?", "Who was George Washington?", etc.

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Copyrights:

Literary Dictionary. The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Literary Terms. Copyright © Chris Baldick 2001, 2004. All rights reserved.  Read more
Poetry Glossary. Copyright © 2007, ILOVEPOETRY, Inc, All Rights Reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Incremental reading" Read more