Sunday, May 24, 2020
Five Keys to Better Memory
Five Keys to Better Memory Matthew Barrett, founder of Brain Trainers, is the speaker for our November 18 WorkSource Professional Network meeting. Barrett has a Masters degree in Psychology and calls himself a âpersonal trainer for the brain.â His lessons take cutting-edge cognitive neuroscience and turn the science into entertaining and accessible presentations for his audience. We spent some time together recently talking about what âbrain trainingâ is and why it matters to jobseekers. We focused first on what Brain Training is, and how it can help. Barrett says that there are five ways you can move information from your short-term âdesktopâ to your long-term âfile cabinet.â Attach emotional Meaning to the information. This is why we almost always remember âfirstsâ like kisses, but why we forget to pick up bread at the store. Organize the information. Singing, setting to music and dancing or other rhythmic movement are ancient ways people have remembered important information. Itâs why we still use the same song to learn and recite the âA,B,Câsâ 175 years after Boston-based music publisher Charles Bradlee copyrighted it in 1835. Acronyms are part of the same process of remembering a series of concepts or names. Visualize something that helps you remember. (This is part of the âEllie, Ellie, sheâs so smellyâ concept.) If you can imagine a picture or link that helps you connect a name, you will recall it more easily. âI met Mr. Robbins in the spring when the robins appeared.â âMrs. Macintosh is the apple of her fatherâs eye.â Elaborate the concept to give yourself more ways to remember it. Elaboration consists of converting the word or name into meaningful words that sound similar and then creating pictures to help you remember the object. If the name of the online encyclopedia âWikipediaâ always eludes you, try this: âWikiâ reminds you of the term âWiccansâ or witches. Think of a group of Wiccans gathered around an encyclopedia and commit that image to memory. The fifth method is Repetition. Finding ways to repeat the name or fact will help move it from your âdesktopâ to storage. Repetition acts as a holding pattern while links are found to retain the information permanently. Repeating a name brings it back to the âdesktopâ for a while so you donât lose it after that critical 12 â" 20 second period that your brain can retain information in short-term memory. Itâs no surprise that the five memory techniques form an acronym: MOVER. Matthew Barrett believes in using what works. Next: Barriers to memory, and what to do about them.
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