You Can Learn to Remember: Change Your Thinking, Change Your Life pdfdrive com
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@miltonbooks You Can Learn to Remember Change Your Thinking, Change
memory and intelligence
It is a common and misguided belief that we fall into two categories of intelligence – we are either bright or dim. Like many people, I did not excel at school. What is more I accepted the judgment of my teachers that I lacked potential – I knew my place and did not try to change it. But the reality is that I need not have had so little confidence in my abilities. Measur able intelligence is largely a product of application – if we apply effective methods of learning in the right way, then we are all as able as each other to store and re trieve data. Memory training enables us to strength en our ability to learn – we know that training our memory can raise our IQ. So, the skills of concentration, imagination and association – all of which are key memory skills – make us brighter too. theories of forgetting H ow long does memory last? What factors govern forgetting? The so-called “trace-decay theory” claims that the neural connections that form particular memories (see p.42 ) may fade and, if they are not used regularly, disappear. Currently, this is impossible to prove. A more popular view is that, once something is committed to long-term memory, it is never lost, and only requires the appropriate association to bring it to mind. Over the course of a lifetime, however, a number of different memories may come to share many of the same cues. In this case it will be difficult to select out any one memory in particular, unless there are exceptional reasons (additional cues) for doing so. For example, we can probably remember our first day at school, as well as the worst day. But most of our school days are too insignificant to have specific cues that differentiate one day from another. They have not been lost from memory, but they have been buried in a shapeless cluster within our mind. Nevertheless, in principle there will be cues, however subtle, that will allow us to recover every single day if we work at doing so. According to this theory, memories become hard to find because they “take over” each other’s cues. Interference is both proactive inhibition (an existing memory inhibits the new one because the cues are monopolized by the older memory) and retroactive inhibition (a new memory blocks our ability to recall old information because the new memory “steals” the older memory’s cues). Some one memorizing two different lists of city names on consecutive days will recall either list less accurately than someone with a list of city names and a list of dog breeds. Proactive inhibition works partly because it causes us to make approximations. If we see a breed of dog that we cannot identify but which resembles a corgi, we will store it as “something that is quite like a corgi but not one”. If asked to recall the appearance of the dog, our memories will bring to mind a corgi and we are likely to have forgotten precisely the distinctive features of the actual breed we need to recall. But retroactive inhibition appears to be the more persistent mechanism in forgetting, because it seems to cause old memories to be “unlearned” and is easily suggestible by logic. When we learn new aspects of a topic, drawing different conclusions from the ones already learned, the new aspects will cause the older theories to be hard to fathom, because the memory of their logic is lost. déjà vu Déjà vu (“already seen”) is the often disconcerting feeling of re- experiencing some thing – of treading on ground we seem to have trodden before. For example, we may be engaged in a conversation and feel that we have had exactly the same interaction on a previous occasion. One theory about déjà vu is that when the features of a current experience are similar to a previous one, the details of which seem fogotten, the mind fills in the blanks, creating a real but misleading memory from a few fragments. Another explanation is that an event may be transferred by the unconscious straight into long-term memory and then reactivated from there. Of course, we may simply have forgotten a previous experience, making our apparent recognition of the current event baffling. Download 0.7 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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