World Memory Championships
The World Memory Championships is an organized competition of memory sports in which competitors memorize as much information as possible within a given period of time.[1] The championship has taken place annually since 1991, with the exception of 1992. The next World Memory Championship will take place in Vashi, Maharashtra, India for the first time. It will take place at 24 to 26 November[2] It was originated by Tony Buzan and co founded by Tony Buzan and Ray Keene. It continues to be organized by the World Memory Sports Council (WMSC), which was jointly founded by Tony Buzan and Ray Keene. In 2016, due to a dispute between some players and the WMSC, the International Association of Memory (IAM) was launched.[3] From 2017 onward, both organizations have hosted their own world championships.
The current WMSC world champion is Tenuun Tamir of Mongolia.[4] The current IAM world champion is Andrea Muzii of Italy.[5]
Format
The World Championships consist of ten different disciplines, where the competitors have to memorize as much as they can in a period of time:
- One hour numbers (23712892....)
- 5-minute numbers
- Spoken numbers, read out one per second
- 30-minute binary digits (011100110001001....)
- One hour playing cards (as many decks of cards as possible)
- 15-minute random lists of words (house, playing, orphan, encyclopedia....)
- 15-minute names and faces
- 5-minute historic dates (fictional events and historic years)
- 15-minute abstract images (WMSC, black and white randomly generated spots) / 5-minute random images (IAM, concrete images)
- Speed cards - Always the last discipline. Memorize the order of one shuffled deck of 52 playing cards as fast as possible.
Venues and winners
World Champions (1991-2016)
# | Year | Venue | Winner |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 1991 | London | Dominic O'Brien |
2 | 1993 | London | Dominic O'Brien |
3 | 1994 | London | Jonathan Hancock |
4 | 1995 | London | Dominic O'Brien |
5 | 1996 | London | Dominic O'Brien |
6 | 1997 | London | Dominic O'Brien |
7 | 1998 | London | Andi Bell |
8 | 1999 | London | Dominic O'Brien |
9 | 2000 | London | Dominic O'Brien |
10 | 2001 | London | Dominic O'Brien |
11 | 2002 | London | Andi Bell |
12 | 2003 | Kuala Lumpur | Andi Bell |
13 | 2004 | Manchester | Ben Pridmore |
14 | 2005 | Oxford | Clemens Mayer |
15 | 2006 | London | Clemens Mayer |
16 | 2007 | Bahrain | Gunther Karsten |
17 | 2008 | Bahrain | Ben Pridmore |
18 | 2009 | London | Ben Pridmore |
19 | 2010 | Guangzhou | Wang Feng |
20 | 2011 | Guangzhou | Wang Feng |
21 | 2012 | London | Johannes Mallow |
22 | 2013 | London | Jonas von Essen |
23 | 2014 | Hainan | Jonas von Essen |
24 | 2015 | Chengdu | Alex Mullen |
25 | 2016* | Singapore | Alex Mullen |
IAM world champions (2017–present)
WMSC world champions (2017–present)
|
- * – The 2016 World Championships was hosted by the WMSC and was the first world championship not recognized by the IAM, who did not host their own world championship that year.[6]
- § – Athletes generally competed in their respective countries given COVID-19 restrictions, with results combined to determine the world champion. Only athletes from countries with a national council were able to participate (the vast minority).
Records
Up-to-date lists of world and national records can be found on the statistics websites of the IAM[7] and WMSC.[8] The best of them are listed in the following table.
Discipline | Record | Athlete | Event |
---|---|---|---|
Hour numbers | 4620 digits | Ryu Song I | WMSC World Championship 2019 |
5-minute numbers | 630 digits | Andrea Muzii | IAM MemoryXL German Championship 2021 |
Spoken numbers | 547 digits | Ryu Song I | WMSC World Championship 2019 |
30-minute binary digits | 7485 digits | Ryu Song I | WMSC World Championship 2019 |
Hour cards | 2530 cards | Kim Su Rim | WMSC World Championship 2019 |
Speed cards | 12.74 seconds | Shijir-Erdene Bat-Enkh | IAM Korea Open 2018 |
15-minute random words | 335 words | Prateek Yadav | WMSC World Championship 2019 |
15-minute names and faces | 224 names | Katie Kermode | IAM World Championship 2018 |
5-minute historic dates | 154 dates | Prateek Yadav | WMSC World Championship 2019 |
15-minute abstract images (WMSC) | 1048 points | Huang Jinyao | China Memory Championships 2022 |
5-minute random images (IAM) | 547 points | Yolan Cohen | IAM Swedish Open Championship 2021 |
See also
- World championship
- Eidetic memory
- Grand Master of Memory
- List of world championships in mind sports
- Memory sport
- Method of loci
- Mnemonist
- Mnemonic major system
- Extreme Memory Tournament
- World Junior Memory Championships
- World Mind Sports Games
- Mind Sports Olympiad
- Memory sport
- Mind sport
- Mind Sports Organisation
- International Association of Memory
- Mental Calculation World Cup
- Mental calculation
- Mental abacus
- WorldSkills
References
- The World Memory Championships - Memory Training - Accelerated Learning
- "World Memory Championships | World Memory Statistics". www.world-memory-statistics.com. Retrieved 2016-12-21.
- "International Association of Memory | Memory Sports". memory-sports.com. Retrieved 2017-12-06.
- "Final result of 30th World Memory Championships | World Memory Championships". www.worldmemorychampionships.com/. Retrieved 2022-03-29.
- "World Memory Championships 2019 | International Association of Memory Statistics". www.iam-stats.org. Retrieved 2019-12-17.
- "World Memory Championships | International Association of Memory Statistics". www.iam-stats.org. Retrieved 2017-12-10.
- "World Records | International Association of Memory statistics". iam-stats.org. Retrieved 2018-12-19.
- "World Records | World Memory Statistics". www.world-memory-statistics.co.uk. Retrieved 2018-12-19.
External links
- World Memory Championships website
- WMSC Statistics website
- IAM website
- IAM Statistics website
- Memoriad - World Memory Olympics website
- List of Memory Competitions
- RNG v1.0 Random Number Generator for training Working Memory