Mind Tools Memory System Grades.

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Memory Techniques Explained

Mind Tools Memory System Grades

The memory systems explained in this section are used for different purposes, require different investments of time to learn and effort to use, and have different levels of effectiveness.

To help you through the systems and put them into context, we have graded them under the following categories:

Ease of Use                 - how easily and quickly can the method be applied?

Effectiveness        - how good is it for retaining information?

Power                 - how much information can be reliably coded?

Learning investment      - i.e. how much effort does it take to learn the system before it can be used?

Who should use        - some of the more sophisticated systems are only worth learning if you are really interested in memory techniques. Others should be useful for everyone

Please note that this grading is necessarily subjective - as stated earlier, different people have different learning styles, different approaches to subjects, different brains and different life experiences. You may find that what we find to be difficult you find easy, or vice versa. Consider these grades to be general guides.

The Link Method

The Link Method is one of the easiest mnemonic techniques available, but is still quite powerful. It is not quite as reliable as a peg technique, as images are not tied to specific, inviolable sequences.

It functions quite simply by making associations between things in a list, often as a story. The flow of the story and the strength of the visualizations of the images provide the cues for retrieval. 

Mind Tools Mnemonic Grades:

Ease of Use                - Very simple

Effectiveness        - Moderate

Power                - Low

Learning investment  - Very low

Who should use         - Anyone

How to use

Taking the first image, imagine associations between items in a list. Although it is possible to remember lists of words where each word is just associated with the next, it is often best to fit the associations into a story: otherwise by forgetting just one association, the whole of the rest of the list can be lost.

As an example, you may want to remember a list of counties in the South of England:

Avon, Dorset, Somerset, Cornwall, Wiltshire, Devon, Gloucestershire, Hampshire, Surrey

This could be done with two approaches, the pure link method, and the story method: 

The Link Method

This would rely on a series of images coding information:

  • An AVON (Avon) lady knocking on a heavy oak Door (Dorset).
  • The Door opens to show a beautiful summer landscape with a Setting sun (Somerset).
  • The setting sun shines down onto a field of CORN (Cornwall).
  • The CORN is so dry it is beginning to WILT (Wiltshire).
  • The Wilting stalks slowly fall onto the tail of the sleeping DEVil (Devon).
  • On the Devil’s horn a woman has impailed a Glossy (Gloucestershire) HAM (Hampshire) when she hit him over the head with it.
  • Now the Devil feels sorry (Surrey) he bothered her.

Note that there need not be any reason or underlying plot to the sequence of images: all that is important are the images and the links between images.

The Story Method

Alternatively this information may be coded by vividly imaging the following scene:

An AVON lady is walking up a path towards a strange house. She is hot and sweating slightly in the heat of high SUMMER (Somerset). Beside the path someone has planted giant CORN in a WALL (Cornwall), but it's beginning to WILT (Wiltshire) in the heat. She knocks on the Door (Dorset), which is opened by the Devil (Devon). In the background she can see a kitchen in which a servant is smearing honey on a HAM (Hampshire), making in Glossy (Gloucestershire) and gleam in bright sunlight streaming in through a window. Panicked by seeing the Devil, the Avon lady panics, screams 'sorry' (Surrey), and dashes back down the path.

Given the fluid structure of this mnemonic, it is important that the images stored in your mind are as vivid as possible, and that significant, coding images are much stronger that ones that merely support the flow of the story. See the section on using mnemonics more effectively for further information on making images as strong as possible.

Adding images to the story expands this technique. After a number of images, however, the system may start to break down. 

Summary

The Link Method is probably the most basic memory technique, and is very easy to understand and use. It is, however, one of the most unreliable systems, given that it relies on the user remembering the sequences of events in a story, or a sequence of images.

It is not always immediately obvious if an image is missing from the sequence, and if an element is forgotten, then all following images may be lost as well. 

The Number/Rhyme System

The Number/Rhyme technique is a very simple way of remembering lists of items in a specific order. It is an example of a peg system - i.e. a system whereby facts are 'pegged' to known sequences of cues (here the numbers 1 - 10). This ensures that no facts are forgotten (because gaps in information are immediately obvious), and that the starting images of the mnemonic visualizations are well know.

At a simple level it can be used to remember things such as a list of English Kings or of American Presidents in their precise order. At a more advanced level it can be used to code lists of experiments to be recalled in a science exam. 

Mind Tools Mnemonic Grades:

Ease of Use                - very easy

Effectiveness        - effective

Power                - only codes 1-10 items without use of enhancement

Learning investment        - low

Who should use        - everyone

How to use the Number/Rhyme Technique

This technique works by helping you to build up pictures in your mind, in which the numbers are represented by things that rhyme with the number, and are linked to images that represent the things to be remembered.

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The usual rhyming scheme is shown below:

  1 - Bun

  2 - Shoe

  3 - Tree

  4 - Door

  5 - Hive

  6 - Bricks

  7 - Heaven

  8 - Skate

  9 - Line

  10 - Hen

If you find that these images do not attract you or stick in your mind, then change them for something more meaningful to you.

These images should be linked to images representing the things to be remembered, for example a list of ten Greek philosophers could be remembered ...

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