As we took our hour and a half drive to Houston, my
granddaughter was practicing a school assignment of memorizing the names of the
first 10 presidents. By the time we got there, she still had not done it. I
told her a simple way to memorize such sequential lists, and showed her that she
could have mastered the task in about 10 minutes. The solution is one of the
oldest mnemonic devices: create image-based story chains. The idea is to
imagine an image for each item to be memorized and then link them in a story sequence.
As I mentioned for Tip 1, several thousand years ago,
ancient Greek orators were noted for their ability to give hours-long speeches
from memory. After all there were no teleprompters then, nor even any practical
way to write down a long speech. So how did they pull off such astonishing
feats? They invented a visual imaging technique where thoughts were mentally
captured as images in the mind’s eye because images are much easier to remember
than words. They then placed these mental images sequentially in imagined story
chains. Thus, they could give their speeches as if they were reading a list of
bullet points, but it was all done in their as visual imagination.
This approach works because the human brain is wired to
construct and remember stories. If you have any doubt, just think of the
popularity of the movies, TV dramas, and novels (some 100,000 in English each
year).
Here is a practical example that should interest school
teachers and students. Suppose you wanted to memorize the organelles of a cell.
Cell Parts and Function
|
Place in Story Chain
|
Nucleus … nuclear … nuclear reactor: makes really
valuable stuff (like gene expression)
|
The cell's most important part is the nucleus.
|
Golgi apparatus … Golgi … gold: stuff that is
really valuable, as in finished product (finished proteins)
|
Energy produced by the reactor is valuable, like
gold
|
Centrioles … center: splits the line (centrioles
split cells)
|
It takes a lot of gold to pay for a professional
football player.
|
Ribosomes … ribs: they put meat on your ribs, as
well as make other proteins too
|
Pro players eat a lot, like bar-b-que ribs.
|
Lysosomes ... lie: ribs lie down on chemicals and
crush them
|
The player lies to the cook that the ribs taste
bad
|
Mitochrondria … mites: they move around
energetically
|
As punishment for lying, the mite bits him in the
"you know where."
|
Cell membrane … cellophane: wraps it all together
|
You wrap up this whole silly story with
cellophane.
|
Note that the sequence could be changed. The icons are
put in whatever order needed to facilitate a story. If it is necessary to keep
track of serial order, as in a list of U.S. Presidents for example, this may
affect your choice of icons and it may take a little more imagination to create
a story chain.
One thing that I have noticed about story chains is
that a lot is remembered just from the process of selecting images and
constructing the story. After all, thinking about a subject is a most powerful
way to remember it. Another thing is that, as with all imaging representations,
the imagination is developed and it becomes easier to come up with creative
solutions that you can apply to other memory tasks. Children can probably do
this better than adults.
Finally, story chains are applicable to many memory
challenges. You can use them for such tasks as speeches, lists, a sequence of
instructions or directions, or names of people in a group. And making up such
stories can be fun.