I have about 500 Anki cards on basic immunology that I and a collaborator created while reading Philipp Dettmer’s book Immune (Philipp Dettmer is the founder of the popular YouTube channel Kurzgesagt, which has been featured on LW before, and the book itself has also been reviewed on LW before). (ETA: When I first wrote this comment, I stupidly forgot to mention that my intention is to publish these cards on the internet for people to freely use, once they are polished.) However, neither of us is that knowledgeable about immunology (yet) so I’m worried about inaccuracies or misleading info in the cards. I’d like at least one person who knows a good amount of immunology (who has learned it from a source other than this book) to look over the cards and give feedback. I probably unfortunately can’t pay any money for this.
I have about 5 years of serious Anki prompt-writing experience, and the cards follow current best practices for prompts as explained in e.g. Andy Matuschak’s prompt-writing guide. In other words, these are not low-effort cloze deletions or ChatGPT-generated or anything like that.
I’m also open to arguments that the right thing to do is to just release the cards as they are, let people maybe point out flaws in public, etc.
I have about 500 Anki cards on basic immunology that I and a collaborator created while reading Philipp Dettmer’s book Immune (Philipp Dettmer is the founder of the popular YouTube channel Kurzgesagt, which has been featured on LW before, and the book itself has also been reviewed on LW before). (ETA: When I first wrote this comment, I stupidly forgot to mention that my intention is to publish these cards on the internet for people to freely use, once they are polished.) However, neither of us is that knowledgeable about immunology (yet) so I’m worried about inaccuracies or misleading info in the cards. I’d like at least one person who knows a good amount of immunology (who has learned it from a source other than this book) to look over the cards and give feedback. I probably unfortunately can’t pay any money for this.
I have about 5 years of serious Anki prompt-writing experience, and the cards follow current best practices for prompts as explained in e.g. Andy Matuschak’s prompt-writing guide. In other words, these are not low-effort cloze deletions or ChatGPT-generated or anything like that.
I’m also open to arguments that the right thing to do is to just release the cards as they are, let people maybe point out flaws in public, etc.
Update: The flashcards have finally been released: https://riceissa.github.io/immune-book/