Most people think they update beliefs more than they actually do. Memory of Thought makes the sequence visible. You take an early position, new evidence arrives, and the system watches whether your reasoning genuinely moves or just cosmetically re-justifies itself.
That is why this mode feels different from simple correctness training. It measures responsiveness, not just end-state accuracy. The goal is not to avoid early hypotheses; it is to avoid becoming trapped inside them.
This trains
Revising a view in proportion to new evidence rather than defending the first plausible model that appeared.
How a session feels
3 steps, 3–5 minutes. Repeat until the feedback starts shaping your instincts.
- 1
Make an initial call
You respond before you have the full picture.
- 2
Receive new evidence
Additional facts arrive that should change the weight of the case.
- 3
Measure the update
Feedback evaluates whether your revised stance moved enough and for the right reasons.
Who it's for
- Users who get stuck on first impressions
- Analysts, forecasters, and investigators
- Anyone training flexibility without becoming mushy
Try a challenge — no sign-up
The demo pulls from the public challenge bank. Your confidence rating and result are the same mechanics you'll see in the real mode.
Start with Memory of Thought
Your first session generates a score baseline in under 10 minutes.