Mentally walk the route to encode and to retrieve
Place items by mentally visiting each locus, and retrieve by mentally re-walking the route.
Why it works
The retrieval walk is the mechanism that makes the method work: each location on the route cues the scene you placed there, which cues the encoded item. Retrieval is automatic to the extent that the location-image pairing was well learned. Walking forward gives the sequence; walking backward retrieves the reverse sequence. The route provides an external order that prevents the usual interference between adjacent items in a list.
How to do it
- To encode: mentally stand at the start of your route and vividly place the first item’s scene at the first locus.
- Move to the second locus; place the second scene there. Continue until all items are placed.
- To retrieve: start at the beginning of the route and "look" at each locus in turn — the scene will appear and the item will follow.
- Practice the retrieval walk twice without checking — errors mean the scene needs to be made more vivid.
Evidence
Memory competition research consistently shows that world-record holders for digit and word memorization universally use spatial journey methods. The encoding-retrieval match (walking the same route mentally during retrieval) aligns with transfer-appropriate processing, a well-established principle in memory research. (observational)
Most evidence comes from memory athletes with extensive training; controlled studies with naive users show more modest, though still positive, results after brief training.
Common mistake
Encoding but never testing retrieval before the material is needed — walking the route should be practiced until it produces the items automatically, not held in reserve for the exam.
Practice this with IX Coach
IX Coach can prompt a mental route walk during practice sessions for concepts with sequential steps — narrating each stop and asking you to produce what is there — as a structured retrieval check.
7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).