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So i've been doing anki for about 5 months and I kinda wanna spice up reps a bit with some j-pop music(only).
I have 2 decks which are=
-RTK 1 recognition(more concentration but since there is no learning on pronunciation on kanji so listening to music kinda 'okay')==>I listen to music while doing this deck sometimes which is about 3 days a week.
-Core 10k optimized(less concentration but since there are pronunciation on vocab music may distract me sometimes)==> I only listen to music this for 2 days so I don't have enough proof.
I tend to listen to music only on my RTK rep and avoid on core 10k. But I also tried listen to japanese music for the last 2 days and "I think" it made me 'better' on my core 10 deck.But I am still worried if music will be a distraction since I would be concentration on 2 stuff, doing my core 10k rep and listening to music.
Also the music I listen to is with japanese vocals which I can understand it most of it which could be the distraction when I decipher the music vocal unconscionably. So I think that music such as classical music may be less of distraction for it has no vocals and I also listen to them but a prefer vocaled j-pop music which keep my motivation up.
So what do you think?
Do you think music can boosts a person motivation to complete reps for the day or it will be a distraction since its multi-tasking which result to concentration divided?
Your personal experience?
I want to hear your thoughts!
Joined: Jun 2011
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It might be interesting to try listening to jpop only when doing Anki reps. As long as you like jpop it might create rewarding positive associations with studying in general, and you can get a rhythm going to your pace. It's up to you. I don't think the fact that it's Japanese lyrics music makes a huge impact, especially if your stories are in English or whatever language. I think what works for different people changes with time, the key is that you're doing them. Also, if you can train yourself to focus on the cards and ignore the music, that's still a valuable mental exercise. I think there have been studies linking classical background music to learning. No matter what you do you won't learn Japanese overnight, so just enjoy. It might be a useful side-study to learn names by noting the names of the band members or producers of the music you listen to, because learning names is a thing unto itself.
Joined: Mar 2014
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I heard about one guy who did his anki reps to the tick tock of a musician's metronome or whatever, so he would have a precise interval of time to "answer" each anki "card" in the "deck" he was reviewing.
I thought, this is taking things WAY too seriously....
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I listen to music whenever I'm not listening to anything else, why would I stop for Anki reps?
Edited: 2014-10-18, 11:25 am
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I would avoid listening to anything with lyrics while studying (maybe a language you don't understand is ok). The reason I say this is because I listen to A LOT of podcasts, audiobooks and whatever while I work. As long as I'm doing a single task involving language, everything goes smoothly. I notice as soon as I do anything related to language (reading notes, typing short sentences, even naming files!) I can't pay attention to either activity very well. In other words, trying to do 2 language tasks at the same time is undesirable. The effect is pretty undeniable and now that I've noticed the effect, I notice that songs with lyrics that I can understand tend to slow me down when I'm reading. Even though I still can't follow Japanese talk shows, when I read while a Japanese show is on, I can tell my speed and concentration is considerably degraded.
Edited: 2014-10-19, 1:27 am
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I also think that it's better to avoid multitasking, but I do use music to boost my studying capabilities. I find that listening to music before I study (or do anything that requires much mental commitment) improves my concentration and cognition.
My guess is that, other than the boost you get from doing something you enjoy, listening to music gives you a mental warm-up, since it's associated with so many different senses and functions (I'm not a neurobiologist, but I think listening to enjoyable music increases the amount of acetyl-choline and dopamine, since it's at once an enjoyable experience, a mental exercise, and associated with movement).
Unless the music I'm listening to is less distracting than the world around me, I find it detrimental to listen to it while studying. This may be because of how I listen to music (very actively), but I can't do much of anything related to language while listening to it (though I don't have trouble doing other tasks that require constant attention). It doesn't matter if there's lyrics or not, or if it's a language I don't know, it requires the focus that language does; I can't even read a short article while listening to music, the same as if I tried listening to someone talk while reading, I can only focus on one of them at a time.
EDIT:
If it's interesting to anyone, I've tried listening to music while studying or doing various things, and I find that logic tasks (like mine sweeper), physical activity, and operating machinery (including vehicles) are the least affected skills; mathematical problems are a bit harder, though I don't know exactly which parts are more difficult (it is suggested that numbers aren't part of language, but maybe the links to language while trying to keep track of values are where the weak points are).
Of course, as stated above, language tasks are the most difficult to focus on (and thus accomplish) while listening to music.
Edited: 2014-10-19, 10:15 pm