7 Tricks to Improve Your Memory
(2011-05-24 16:42:16)
标签:
杂谈 |
分类: 杂谈 |
How do you remember the names of new business associates?
Do you:
A) repeat their name five times in your head while shaking their
hand?
B)
C) associate the name with a famous actress and picture her doing a
headstand on a balance beam?
If you answered A or B, you are fighting an uphill battle, one
that–if you’re over 40, especially–you’re
Foer stumbled into the world of memory athletics by chance, but
was driven to delve into it because of what he and the rest of us
are facing today in our hyper-technological world. On the one hand,
we rely on our memory less as technology–cell phones, auto redial,
Google searches, etc–provide us with a wealth of information at the
tap of some keys.
Foer said he was skeptical when he first
started
According to Foer’s research, if you need an assist
in
- Use graphic images to remember: Your brain is
wired to remember visually and
spatially, and the more erotic and exotic the images, the better your brain does. Foer writes that you have to “take the kinds of memories our brains aren’t good at holding on to and transform them into the kinds of memories our brains were built for.” It’s called elaborate encoding: “The general idea with most memory techniques is to change whatever boring thing is being inputted into your memory into something that is so colorful, so exciting, and so different from anything you’ve seen before that you can’t possibly forget it,” he writes in his book. - Associate hard-to-remember facts with your childhood
home. In order to remember a to-do list, or even names of
people, you need to place these things in something very familiar
like the house you grew up in. Take a visual tour of your house
starting with
the front door, placing your first item on your list there, and wend your way through your house placing each item in different hallways or rooms. But don’t just place “call Sophia,” on the front stoop. Take the image to the extreme. Think of what Sophia reminds you of (Sophia Loren) and visually place her sitting on the lap of a she-male making a phone call (this is Foer’s example, not mine). Or, suggests Foer, if you’re trying to remember to buy cottage cheese, think of Claudia Schiffer swimming in a giant vat of it. After you’ve place down your memories, then retake that tour of your house and you’ll visually pick up and remember each of the items you laid down. - Oh yeah, make the images very erotic–and absurd, according to 29-year-old Foer, and the centuries of mental athletes (mostly male) that came before him. That’s pretty much how our minds are wired, so go with it. You’re bound to remember absurdly lurid images more than you’d remember the mundane.
- Connect the image to a celebrity or close relative or friend. Go back to that Sophia Loren example. When you meet someone, quickly think of an association–an actor, a model, the president, your grandmother–and think of that person in an outrageous situation, the more lurid the better.
- Use “chunking” to remember passwords.
Chunking–grouping numbers or letters into chunks–helps make it
easier for a long sequence to be remembered. This is why credit
card numbers are separated into groups of four and hyphens are
inserted into phone numbers. Thus, the password Li34TH7 can be
chunked as Li
34 Th7. And your memory will work even better if you put the chunks into a context. Long Island (Li), 34th street (34TH) and 7th avenue (7). - Code your numbers. To remember numbers, use an
age-old technique called “Major System.” It uses a code to change
numbers into letters and then those letters can form
easy-to-remember words, which can then be visualized.
You’ll have to read his book, p. 164 to get the code, but wrote Foer, “When I first learned it, I immediately memorized my credit card and bank account numbers.” - Practice, practice, practice. Visualizing
images, and doing it in a matter of seconds, takes practice. Your
mental muscles get better at it the more you do it. One of the
memory experts Foer interviewed told him that if he practiced one
hour a day, six days a week, he could be in the top 3 of the U.S.
Memory Championship. Which he did!

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