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Failing 15% of the time is the best way to learn, say scientists

Researchers say they have discovered the ‘Goldilocks’ zone’ where people learn the fastest

Phoebe Weston
Science Correspondent
Tuesday 05 November 2019 17:06 GMT
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Research looked at simple tasks with a correct and incorrect answer but scientists say it could apply to more complex learning
Research looked at simple tasks with a correct and incorrect answer but scientists say it could apply to more complex learning

When learning something new, people naturally look to challenge themselves but the task should be too easy or too difficult, lest they get bored or give up.

Despite a long history of research, it is unclear why particular difficulty levels might be best for learning.

However, scientists from the University of Arizona say they have now found the "Goldilocks zone" – with their data suggesting people who fail 15 per cent of the time learn the fastest.

Researchers created machine-learning experiments in which they taught computers simple tasks like categorising patterns or arranging numbers. The computers learnt fastest when they got 85 per cent of answers correct, according to the paper published in Nature Communications.

“We show theoretically that training at this optimal difficulty can lead to exponential improvements in the rate of learning,” researchers wrote in the paper.

Scientists say the "85 per cent rule" applies to things we learn through experiences – for example a radiologist wanting to learn the difference between images of tumours and anomalies that are not tumours.

“You get better at figuring out there’s a tumour in an image over time, and you need experience and you need examples to get better,” said lead researcher Robert Wilson from the University of Arizona.

“I can imagine giving easy examples and giving difficult examples and giving intermediate examples. If I give really easy examples, you get 100 per cent right all the time and there’s nothing left to learn.

“If I give really hard examples, you’ll be 50 per cent correct and still not learning anything new, whereas if I give you something in between, you can be at this sweet spot where you are getting the most information from each particular example.”

Although the research looked at simple tasks with a correct and incorrect answer, Dr Wilson says it could apply to more complex learning.

Dr Wilson: “If you are taking classes that are too easy and acing them all the time, then you probably aren’t getting as much out of a class as someone who’s struggling but managing to keep up.

“The hope is we can expand this work and start to talk about more complicated forms of learning.”

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