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  • Boost Your Creativity by Improving Your Working Memory

    In Mind Hacks, Thinking, Ideas, Thought, Brain Hacks, Memory, Creativity, Creative Thinking, / 16 May 2012 / 0 comments

    Boost Your Creativity by Improving Your Working MemoryYour working memory capacity, or the amount of information you're able to actively hold in your mind at once, isn't just easy-access storage in your brain. According to Art Markman (Ph. D), writing for Psychology Today, a better working memory increases your capacity to generate creative idea. One study demonstrates:

    In one study, the researchers actually explored the creativity of improvisations played by cellists with no formal training in improvisation. At the start of the study, they measured everyone's working memory capacity. Then, participants were given the chance to perform three 3-minute improvisations based on a theme (such as Winter or Spring). Each improvisation had a different theme. The improvisations were recorded in a studio, and then professional musicians rated them for their originality and creativity. The creativity of the first improvisations people performed was about the same regardless of their working memory capacity. However, the people with high working memory capacity played better improvisations as they progressed through the study, while those with low working memory capacity played worse improvisations. So, by the end of the study, the people with higher working memory capacity were playing significantly more creative improvisations than those with low working memory capacity.

    According to this study, and others mentioned by Markman, working memory looks to have an effect on the types of ideas you generate. When we try to come up with new ideas, we almost always start with the familiar. People with low working memory capacities just stick with that familiar stuff. People with high working memory capacities, however, start to depart from the usual and begin to look outside of what they already know.

    So how do you increase your working memory capacity? While there are no definitive methods, there are several things believed to be helpful. Improving reading comprehension is one, which can be done by reading more often and paying close attention to what you read. With every sentence, you should be able to recall it in memory afterwards—even if that recollection is only temporary. Practicing this can make a difference. Additionally, dual n-back training can actually help your brain focus better on tasks and this should help your working memory. Brain Workshop is one free game that can get you started. In addition to focusing better, breaking down information you want to remember into small chunks can help. Simple information is almost always going to be easier to remember.

    While research is still ongoing and there are no definitive answers, your working memory capacity is shaping up to be an important factor in how you think all-around. Spend some time with it and you may find it easier to generate better ideas.

    Creativity, Persistence and Working Memory | Psychology Today

  • Upgrade Your Memory: How to Quickly Memorize Lists

    In Mind Hacks, Memory, Memorization, Brain, Psychology, Science, Creativity, Creative Thinking, / 11 May 2012 / 0 comments

    Upgrade Your Memory: How to Quickly Memorize Lists The key to remembering things is to make them memorable. Turn names, numbers, and abstract words into images that are gross, funny, or absurd. In this video, Nelson Dellis, USA Memory Champion, demonstrates how to do this—using an example list of random words.

    Memory champions use this technique of creating pictures out of words and weaving them into a story—but anyone and everyone can use these tricks to upgrade their "software" or brains. (Having trained my brain to boost my memory with Nelson earlier this year, I can attest to the power of this method.)

    This three-minute video is a great primer on making what you need to remember unforgettable.

    Upgrade Your Memory with Nelson Dellis | YouTube

  • Feeling Nostalgic Can Warm You Up When You’re Chilly

    In Mind Hacks, Health, Body Hacks, Memory, Psychology, Science, Creativity, Creative Thinking, / 10 May 2012 / 0 comments

    Feeling Nostalgic Can Warm You Up When You're ChillyNobody likes the discomfort of feeling a little chilly, but if you don't have a jacket on hand a recent study in the journal Emotion suggests all you need to do to warm yourself up is think nostalgic thoughts.

    Across four different experiments researchers found that people were more comfortable in cold environments when they indulged in nostalgic reverie. The theory is that nostalgia serves a homeostatic function that tricks your mind into returning to a happier place and effectively making your body more comfortable. The next time you wander out without your jacket just remember to think nostalgic thoughts and you might just combat that cold long enough to get home.

    Heartwarming Memories: Nostalgia Maintains Physiological Comfort. | Emotion via BPS Research Digest

    Photo by infowidget.

  • The More You Struggle with New Information the More Likely You Are to Learn It

    In Learning, Skills, Education, Teach Yourself, Memory, Failure, Creativity, Creative Thinking, / 27 April 2012 / 0 comments

    The More You Struggle with New Information the More Likely You Are to Learn ItTrying to learn new skills or new information can be really frustrating, but as Time Magazine points out, the more you struggle with taking on new information the more likely you are to retain and recall that information later.

    Nobody likes to fail when learning a new task, but it's an essential part of the learning process that's often left out when we're offered up information in a neatly packaged, structured way. While much of the research into the learning process is concentrated on children, it's a lesson adults can learn from as well. As Time notes, employers use the same process as many teachers:

    [W]hile the model adopted by many teachers and employers when introducing others to new knowledge—providing lots of structure and guidance early on, until the students or workers show that they can do it on their own—makes intuitive sense, it may not be the best way to promote learning. Rather, it's better to let the neophytes wrestle with the material on their own for a while, refraining from giving them any assistance at the start.

    It's a healthy reminder that struggling through a difficult problem—whether it's learning Photoshop, getting used to a new webapp, or picking up a new skill—is a necessary part of the learning process. It also works out in the long run because you're better able to recall the information you learned.

    Why Floundering Is Good | Time

    Photo by Evil Erin.

 
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