Psychologists have focused on mental
strategies that can enhance your ability to
acquire information, to retain it over time,
and to retrieve what you have acquired and
retained. Let’s begin with the process of
acquiring information—that is, transforming
what you see and hear into an enduring
memory. Our minds don’t work like video
cameras, passively recording everything
that happens around us. To acquire information
effectively, you need to actively
manipulate it.
1.
One easy type of active
manipulation is rehearsal: repeating to-belearned
information to yourself. You’ve
probably tried this strategy already, but
psychologists have found that some types
of rehearsal are better than others.
Studies show that this type of rehearsal
improves long-term learning more than
rehearsing the name without any spacing
between rehearsals (Landauer & Bjork,
1978).
2.
Simple rehearsal can be beneficial, but
one of the most important lessons from
psychological research is that we acquire
information most effectively when we think
about its meaning and reflect on its significance.
...In attempting to answer such questions,
you will need to review what you’ve
learned about behaviorism and then relate
it to other things you already know about. It
is much easier to remember new information
when you can relate it to something
you already know.
3.
You’ll also learn later in this book about
techniques for visualizing information, first
developed by the ancient Greeks, that modern
psychological research has proven to
be effective memory aids (Paivio, 1969).
One such technique, known as the method
of loci, involves “mentally depositing” information
you wish to remember into familiar
locations and then later searching through
those locations to recall the information.
For example, suppose you want to
remember the major contributions of
Wundt, Freud, and Skinner to the development
of psychology. You could use your current
or former home as the location and
imagine Wundt’s reaction time apparatus
lying on your bed, Freud’s psychoanalysis
couch sitting in your living room, and
Skinner’s rats running around your bathroom.
Then when you need this information, you
can “pull up” an image of your home and take
a mental tour through it in order to see
what’s there.You can use this basic approach
with a variety of familiar locations—a school
building you know well, a shopping mall, and
so forth—in order to remember many different
kinds of information.
4.
You can use each of the mental manipulations
discussed here to help you remember
and learn the material in this textbook
and prepare for your tests:
• Think about and review the information
you have acquired in class on a regular
basis. Begin soon after class, and then
try to schedule regular “booster”
sessions.
• Don’t wait until the last second to cram
your review into one sitting; research
shows that spacing out review and repetition
leads to longer-lasting recall.
• Don’t just look at your class notes or
this textbook; test yourself on the material
as often as you can. Research also
shows that actively retrieving information
you’ve acquired helps you to later
remember that information more than
just looking at it again.
• Take some of the load off your memory
by developing effective note-taking and
outlining skills. Students often scribble
down vague and fragmentary notes during
lectures, figuring that the notes will
be good enough to jog memory later. But
when the time comes to study, they’ve
forgotten so much that their notes are
no longer clear. Realize that you can’t
write down everything an instructor
says, and try to focus on making detailed
notes about the main ideas, facts, and
people mentioned in the lecture.
• Organize your notes into an outline that
clearly highlights the major concepts.
The act of organizing an outline will
force you to reflect on the information
in a way that promotes retention and
will also provide you with a helpful
study guide to promote self-testing and
review.
To follow up on these suggestions and
find much more detailed information on
learning and study techniques, see the
Recommended Reading by Hermann,
Raybeck, & Gruneberg (2002).
ref) Psychology_Schacter,Gilbert, Wegner(2009)
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