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
matching names and faces
M ost of us tend to be able to recognize a face that we have seen before. What we find difficult is remembering the name that goes with it. One of the most pleasing everyday benefits of an improved memory is the ability to match names and faces after only a brief introduction – even if that introduction was several years ago. The key is to link together the face, name and place in a chain of association. When you are introduced to someone, study their face. If you were to create a caricature of the face, what parts would you exaggerate? Does the face look warm or cold; happy or sad; vital or tired; confident or shy? Ethically, of course, making judgments based on appearance is highly dubious. However, studies have shown that subjects asked to make personality assumptions purely on someone’s “look” benefitted from greatly improved recall of that person’s name. For the purposes of your own memory, lay the ethical question aside (but don’t let your judgments influence the impressions you form about the person). Say you are introduced to a woman called Valerie Night ingale. She has a happy face, pointed nose and soft voice. You might visualize a beautiful bird swooping into a valley, singing happily. The valley triggers the name Valerie and, as the nightingale is a bird famous for its “voice”, the birdsong triggers the memory of her surname; the pointed nose reinforces the bird idea. Condense the image: visualize the bird nesting in her hair. When you come to recall her name, her face will prompt the image of the bird in her hair, thus triggering the chain of association. what’s in a name? EXERCISE FOURTEEN This exercise will give you practice in forming images and associations that will help you remember names and faces. To simulate a first meeting, do the exercise with a friend. 1. From a pile of magazines and newspapers, cut out 10 pictures of unfamiliar faces for each of you. If the photos don’t have captions to identify them, make up appropriate names and write them on the backs of the pictures. 2. Swap your pictures with those your friend has cut out and named. Lay them out and study the faces before checking the names. Work on your initial impressions. What might the person do for a living? Is the face pleasant, stern, time-worn, jovial, anxious, mischievous, and so on? Where might the person live? 3. Let your imagination form associations between the faces and the names. Limit the time you spend doing this to less than a minute for each face. 4. Put the pictures to one side and wait for about fifteen minutes, or longer if you like. Test your partner by showing them the photos and covering up the names. Ask your partner to test you. How many names did you recall correctly? Download 0.7 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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