Nataliya Kosmyna
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
You will learn some random cool things in parallel, maybe excluding pottery, and that will still take less for your whole body to work, right, than actually that 30 seconds of the pottery from a chat GPT.
Again, very important here as a note, we do not have the data from LLM perspective, so this is just my subjective one.
Absolutely.
So just to simplify, right?
So what actually happens is for the different types of cognitive load, right?
Actually, in the paper, we have a whole small section of this.
So if someone actually wants to dive into that, that would be great.
There are different types of cognitive load.
And the whole idea is that it's how much of the effort you would need to be on the task or to process information in the current task.
For example, if I'm going to stop right now talking as I'm talking, I'm going to start just giving you very heavy definitions.
Even if you're definitely interested in those, it will be just harder for you to process.
And if I were to put
um this brain sensing device on you right the EEG cap that I mentioned you would definitely see that spike because you would try to follow and then you'll be like oh it's interesting but really gets hard and hard if I'm gonna just throw a ton of terminology on you right so that's basically what and this is just simplification right there's definitely um like check the paper and there's so so much into that
The idea for the cognitive load and the brain, though, is that all it is studied before us, so not in our paper.
We just talk about this, but there are multiple papers, and some of them we cite in our paper, is that your brain actually in learning, specifically in learning, but also in other use cases, but we are talking right now in learning,
actually needs cognitive load.
Like, you cannot just deliver information on this, like, platter.
Like, here you go, here's information.
There are studies already pre-LLM, so pre-large language models, use pre-chartboards that do talk to you about the fact that if you just give information as is, a person will get bored real fast.
And they'll be like, yeah, okay, whatever.