Moonwalking with Einstein Ch 1-2

Memory

The Special Case of "S"

Synesthesia: hearing/reading words/
numbers conjured up images, sounds, tastes, textures

"Take the number 1. This is a proud, well-built man; 2 is a high-spirited woman; 3 a gloomy person (why, I don't know); 6 a man with a swollen foot; 7 a man with a mustache; 8 a very stout woman--a sack within a sack"(Foer, 2011, p. 33).

Drawbacks

Trouble understanding abstract
concepts & metaphors b/c of
all the images (Foer, 2011, p. 33).

Unable to distinguish between
useless & useful material; can't
prioritize or generalize;
unemployable (Foer, 2011, p. 36).

Mental Athletes: "Average" Memory?

MRI study (Maguire, Valentine, & Wilding)-->mental athletes had same brain structures as controls

However, mental athletes activated
different circuitry during the
memorization task: they engaged regions involved with visual memory & spatial
navigation

Ben, Ed, & Lukas
all said anyone could
be a memory champion

Other Research On Memory

Ebbinghaus

Ebbinghaus

Single-subject study on himself using nonsense syllables produced curve of
forgetting

Maguire

Scanned brains of London taxi drivers

They had larger right posterior hippocampus, which is involved in spatial navigation

The brain is a mutable organ: neuroplasticity (Foer, 2011, p. 38).

Baker/baker paradox

When shown faces, people are more likely
to remember that the person
is a baker
rather than their
last name is Baker

Knowing someone's profession provides many more neural links than does a proper noun

References

Foer, J. (2011). Moonwalking with Einstein: The art and science of remembering everything. New York, NY: Penguin Books.

Manufactured synesthesia (Foer, 2011, p. 44)

The Art of Memory
(Foer, 2011, p. 9)

We remember what we construct meaning out of.