Start a session
Choose a practice type, role target, language, tags, and persona so every saved item has context.
A Postgres-backed memory layer for mock interviews, project deep dives, English speaking, and high-stakes Q&A. Capture strong answers, weak spots, power sentences, mental models, and drills without breaking practice flow.
Review saved Q&A, feedback, and reusable phrases before your next practice.
Saved Q&A and feedback will appear here after a practice session. You can also add the first record manually.
Weak answers you save will appear here.
No current practice yet. Add a record to start.
Clearing cannot be undone. Use it only when you want to start over.
Practice loop
Expression Memory keeps one loop interactive: practice, save, retrieve, drill, and record progress in the hosted workspace.
Choose a practice type, role target, language, tags, and persona so every saved item has context.
Save the question, your raw answer, feedback, score, recommended answer, weaknesses, and strong sentences.
Find past weak questions, reusable patterns, power sentences, or mental models by keyword, tag, type, or weakness.
Turn weak turns and low-mastery assets into practice prompts, then record attempts until the answer holds under pressure.
What gets saved
Expression Memory separates raw answers from the reusable pieces that make future answers sharper.
Mock interviewer, hiring manager, bar raiser, English coach, and seniority coach each bias what should be captured.
Save exact sentences that sound crisp, senior, or natural, plus the pattern behind them.
Capture reusable structures such as before/after framing, trade-off framing, and bottleneck diagnosis.
Every saved asset can become a prompt that forces spoken recall instead of passive reading.
Coaching modes
Eleven built-in personas decide whether a turn should create feedback, story frames, tone moves, answer patterns, or drills.
Expression Memory is a hosted practice-memory workspace. It records the assets you choose to save and keeps AI-generated coaching feedback clearly separated from product-owned data.
Sessions, turns, assets, and attempts are stored as authenticated Postgres records under your account.
The product records feedback and scores supplied by your AI coach. It does not pretend to grade speech by itself.
The goal is to save high-value expression assets during real practice, then bring them back when you ask to repractice.
Run the interview flow, ask one question at a time, and save each high-value turn.
Evaluate ownership, scope, ambiguity handling, collaboration, and business impact.
Stress-test clarity, evidence, trade-offs, and whether the candidate sounds hireable at the target level.
Probe requirements, scale, APIs, data model, bottlenecks, reliability, and trade-offs.
Probe STAR stories, conflict, influence, leadership, failure, and learning.
Turn project experience into a clear technical story with ownership, constraints, decisions, and impact.
Rewrite rough ideas into crisp, speakable, interview-ready sentences.
Convert facts into memorable narrative arcs that can be spoken under pressure.
Make answers sound less like task execution and more like judgment, leverage, and ownership.
Help a non-native speaker produce clear, natural, concise spoken answers.
Attack vague answers, ask follow-ups, and identify what would fail in a real interview.
Hosted workspace
Open the hosted workspace in your browser, create a session, and keep every saved turn available for search and drills.
/expression-memoryCreate session -> Save one answerSearch memory -> Drill weak turnsHow the hosted workspace stores, recalls, and drills expression memory.
Authenticated workspace data is stored in Postgres under your account.
The turn links question, answer, score, feedback, weaknesses, tags, and reusable assets so you can find and drill it later.
Not in this MVP. It is a structured memory and repractice layer for coaching conversations, interview practice, and speaking drills you already run.
Save high-value turns: questions, original answers, feedback, scores, recommended answers, power sentences, mental models, story frames, tone moves, weaknesses, and drills.