
Psychologists Mary Gick and Keith Holyoak found that people crack the notorious radiation problem more often after reading a story about a general dividing armies to avoid mines. The mechanism isn’t copying details; it’s mapping relationships. Designing notes that emphasize structure invites this transfer reliably during reviews and serendipitous searches.

Serendipity favours prepared minds, but calendars can help. Rotate attention across unrelated collections, then force one deliberate link each session. Even weak ties add path options in your graph, increasing chance encounters later. Scheduled variety prevents stale loops and protects you from prematurely narrowing possible explanations, designs, or collaborators.

Echo chambers repeat what you already believe; resonant rooms let differing notes amplify insight without drowning nuance. Curate friction with prompts that ask, “What would an ecologist, historian, or hardware engineer notice here?” Your notes become hospitable to disagreement, guiding synthesis rather than flattening difference into easy consensus.