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
tracing connections
EXERCISE TWENTY FIVE Knowledge does not exist in isolation. By tracing connections from one subject to another and filling in the context, you begin to gain a more complete understanding. The information becomes more meaningful, more interesting, and hence more memorable. 1. Place leisure activities in context by learning about their background – not only through books but also through observation. A gardener might read up on the plant finders who in time past discovered and collected plants he or she is now growing, as well as keeping a diary of his or her own garden, with notes on flowering times, wildlife, and so on. 2. Place world news in the perspective of its historical background. There is no clean sep aration between history and current affairs. History is happening now, all over the world, as we read this book. Trace present events to their origins in the past. 3. When you come across a coincidence – two different sources mentioning the same name or information – take this as a sign that it might be worth delving further into the subject. In a biography, for example, you are sure to read about the subject’s family and friends – do some biographical research into these figures. memory of the future C ompetitors who take part in the annual Mind Sports Olympiad (of which the World Memory Championship is one part), whether they are competing at chess, memory, bridge or speed reading, are now being referred to as “mentathletes”. This term reflects a growing public fascination with the true potential of our brains. At the same time, it is being increasingly realized that feats of memory are not merely conjuring tricks, or attempts born out of sheer perseverance and application to make a name in the record books – like someone who has spent an unprecedented length of time in a phone box. No, memory champions demonstrate something much more significant than this: the perfectibility of mental capacity, the scientifically important fact that the brain can do far more work than most people realize. Nature’s gift of the mind is richer and more brilliant than anything most of us have ever dreamed of. It is reassuring that, in an age where technological innovation is massively dominated by computers, to make communal and personal information available through smarter and smarter software, there is a corner of our thoughts still devoted to the time-honoured topic of human memory. Even as you read, exciting new discoveries are being made in a handful of research labs across the globe. It is to be hoped that cognitive and psychological studies will continue to be pursued with everyday practical applications in mind – in particular, the question of which techniques work best for storing and retrieving specific types of information. What we can be fairly sure about is that none of us needs “gimmicks” (such as portable computers and pocket organizers) to be able to remember – just a will and a way. All we memory champions can do, for the moment at least, is pass on the techniques that we have learned by a long process of experiment and refinement. I like to think that we are pioneers, not conjurers. What conjurer would so willingly reveal the backstage workings of his tricks to a curious audience? In time, I hope that there will be more and more of us who can open up new rooms in the memory palace and pocket the treasures within. bibliography Abrahams, Roger D. ed. African American Folktales: Stories from Black Traditions in the New World Pantheon Books (New York), 1985 Ashcraft, Mark H. Human Memory and Cognition, Second Edition HarperCollins (London) and Addison-Wesley (Reading, Massachussetts), 1994 Baddeley, Alan Your Memory, A User’s Guide Prion (London) and Allyn & Bacon (Needham Heights, Massachussetts), 1998 Bloom, Floyd E. and Lazerson, Arlyne Brain, Mind, and Behavior W.H. Freeman and Co. (Basingstoke, UK and New York), 1988 Buzan, Tony and Buzan, Barry The Mind Map Book BBC Books (London) and Plume Books (New York), 1996 Buzan, Tony Use Your Memory BBC Books (London) and Penguin Books (New York), 1992 Cade, C. Maxwell and Coxhead, Nona The Awakened Mind Element (Shaftesbury, Dorset and Rockport, Massachussetts), 1989 Crook, Thomas H. and Adderly, Brenda The Memory Cure Thorsons (London and San Francisco), 1999 Crossley-Holland, Kevin ed. Northern Lights: Legends, Sagas and Folktales Faber and Faber Ltd (London), 1987 Dudley, Geoffrey A. Double Your Learning Power Thorsons (London and San Francisco), 1986 Fidlow, Michael Strengthen Your Memory Foulsham & Co Ltd (Cippenham, UK), 1991 Fry, Ron Improve Your Memory Kogan Page (London), 1997 Gatti, Anne Tales from the African Plains Pavilion Books Ltd (London) and Puffin (New York), 1997 Greenfield, Susan The Human Brain, A Guided Tour Phoenix (Oxford, UK) and Basic Books (New York), 1997 Gruneberg, Michael M. and Herrmann, Douglas J. Your Memory for Life Blandford (London) and Sterling Publishing (New York), 1997 Houston, Jean The Possible Human J.B. Tarcher (New York), 1982 Hull, Robert Central and South American Stories Tales from Around the World series Wayland Ltd (Hove, UK), 1994 Lawson, John and Silver, Harold A Social History of Education in England Methuen (London), 1973 O’Brien, Dominic How to Develop a Perfect Memory Pavilion (London), 1993 O’Brien, Dominic How to Pass Exams Headline (London), 1995 O’Brien, Dominic Super Memory Power (Books 1–4) Linguaphone (London), 1997 Ostrander, Sheila and Schroeder, Lynn Cosmic Memory: The Supermemory Revolution Souvenir Press (London), 1991 Parkin, Alan J. Memory – Phenomena, Experiment and Theory Psychology Press (Hove, UK), 1993 Rose, Steven The Making of Memory Bantam Books (London and New York), 1993 Russell, Peter The Brain Book Routledge (London) and Penguin (New York), 1997 Samuel, David Memory – How We Use It, Lose It and Can Improve It Weidenfeld & Nicolson (London) and New York University Press (New York), 1999 Schacter, Daniel L. Searching for Memory Basic Books (London) and HarperCollins (New York), 1996 Wingfield, Arthur and Byrnes, Dennis L. The Psychology of Human Memory Academic Press (London and Chestnut Hill, Massachussetts), 1981 Yates, Frances A. The Art of Memory Pimlico (London) and University of Chicago Press (Chicago), 1994 acknowledgments The author and publishers would like to thank Tony Buzan for his permission to use the Mind Map®™ technique in this book. For further information about Mind Maps®™, please contact the Buzan Organization at the following places: Download 0.7 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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