jamin on May 26th, 2005

New Scientist has a nice article entitled 11 Steps to a Better Brain. In addition to some nice diet and exercise tips (areas in which I could certainly use improvement) they mention mnemonics, an art of casual interest to me.

AN AUDITORIUM is filled with 600 people. As they file out, they each tell you their name. An hour later, you are asked to recall them all. Can you do it? Most of us would balk at the idea. But in truth we’re probably all up to the task. It just needs a little technique and dedication.

First, learn a trick from the “mnemonists” who routinely memorise strings of thousands of digits, entire epic poems, or hundreds of unrelated words. When Eleanor Maguire from University College London and her colleagues studied eight front runners in the annual World Memory Championships they did not find any evidence that these people have particularly high IQs or differently configured brains. But, while memorising, these people did show activity in three brain regions that become active during movements and navigation tasks but are not normally active during simple memory tests.

This may be connected to the fact that seven of them used a strategy in which they place items to be remembered along a visualised route (Nature Neuroscience, vol 6, p 90). To remember the sequence of an entire pack of playing cards for example, the champions assign each card an identity, perhaps an object or person, and as they flick through the cards they can make up a story based on a sequence of interactions between these characters and objects at sites along a well-trodden route.

I’ve always been fascinated with what the trained human brain is capable of accomplishing.

Tags:

2 Responses to “11 Steps to a Better Brain”

  1. You might want to check out the Mentat wiki-

    http://www.ludism.org/mentat/

    It’s full of nitty-gritty on how to do these sorts of tricks.

    And if you learn some that aren’t in there, you can add them. {:)}=

    What you just described is a “Memory Palace”:

    http://www.ludism.org/mentat/MemoryPalace

  2. Nice wiki, Lion. Thanks!