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GEFor a long time, studying was thought to work like exposure.
The more times you saw information — by re-reading a chapter, reviewing notes, or highlighting text — the more it would stick. The assumption was simple: repetition equals learning.
But memory research began challenging that idea.
In the early 20th century, psychologists studying memory noticed something unexpected. When people were forced to recall information from memory, the act of retrieval itself strengthened the memory.
Later experiments throughout the 20th and early 21st centuries confirmed this effect. Instead of simply reviewing material again, learners who tested themselves — trying to retrieve information without looking — often remembered more later.
This became known as the testing effect or retrieval practice.
In one well-known line of studies, students who repeatedly re-read material often reported feeling more confident during practice. The text looked familiar, the ideas felt clear, and studying felt smooth.
But when researchers tested retention days later, students who practiced retrieval — even if they struggled and made mistakes during practice — frequently remembered significantly more.
The key difference is how the brain processes information.
Re-reading strengthens familiarity.
Retrieval strengthens memory pathways.
This created another example of a common pattern in learning science:
The method that feels easiest while studying is not always the one that produces the strongest memory later.
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