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Actors & Memory
Merlin Mann | Jan 27 2006
Association for Psychological Science: 'To be or, or ... um ... line!' Given my own undependable memory and the hand-hewn props I rely upon to shore it up, I was intrigued by this article/press release from last year on how actors are able to remember their lines (via boing boing):
That resonates for me. I'm pretty sure that a lot of my own memory deficits start at the time of "encoding" because I haven't done more than try to shove the words into the right slots. This approach seems like a sensible and organic way to put the material in a more meaningful mental context. For a good overview of memory techniques, try the Memory Improvement Tools section over on Mind Tools. I'd recommend starting with the introduction, which offers insight into further engaging your "whole mind" in the memory process:
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Perhaps you might be aware...Submitted by Randal L. Schwartz (not verified) on January 27, 2006 - 12:56pm.
Perhaps you might be aware (or not) that a small portion of us suffer from a "mental blindness", which ruins visual mnemonic devices. Specifically, I cannot recall or create pictures in mind, at all. I didn't even know I was different until I was about 20, after asking a fellow keyboardist whether he memorized songs by the way they sound, or by the way his hands rested on the keyboard (the two ways I do it). He said "I can do that, but it's much easier to just see the notes and play those", and my jaw dropped. It had never occurred to me that people actually meant it when they said "see things" with their mind, and it started me on a continual quest to discover more about how differently everyone else related to the world. And at age 44, I still cannot, in any way shape or form, see a thing. Everything I remember has to come to me in sounds or in body positions. As a result, I do break things down into meanings, and am unable to remember the specific words. I also remember people by simple words about what they are wearing, and if they later change clothes and come back into the room but don't speak (I can recognize their voice that way), I think I'm talking to a new person! Oh, and forget computer icons. I have to name each icon, then associate the function with the spoken name. If I later pick a different name for the icon, I no longer know what it does. Most of the time, I find myself hovering for the tooltip so I can get a consistent name for the icon. Ugh. Takes far too long. (Keep that in mind when you are designing user interfaces, please!) Anyway, just a datapoint about what some of us have to deal with. » POSTED IN:
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