When you encounter new information and want to remember it,
the formation of a memory is enormously affected by what happens immediately
afterwards. The most common problem is that you think of something else, and
that something else erases what you just learned from your working memory
“scratchpad” before it has time to set up in long-term memory. The way to avoid
this problem is to do something with the new learning right away. Memory
scientists often call this a “production” effect. That is, if you produce
something from the new learning right away, it not only reduces interfering
distractions but also strengthens the encoding and speeds up memory formation
into lasting form.
Common production activities might include using the new
information in a new way, to apply it in some kind of activity, such as solving
a problem. This option is not always available, but there are other approaches,
such as hearing the same information at the same time you read or see it. The
most common production method may be taking handwritten notes during the
presentation of the new information. I have noticed that many college students
do not take notes or have poor note-taking skills. Many apparently have not
been taught how to take notes.
A recent study has compared the effects of silently reading,
hearing somebody else read aloud, hearing a recording of yourself reading
aloud, and actual reading aloud in the real-time of the learning. The last two
groups tested to see if the actual mouth and tongue movements of reading aloud
at the time of reading had any effect. It does.
The study divided 75 college students into these four groups
in which they participated in two 15-minute sessions separated by two weeks. In
the first session, they read a list of 160 words presented one at a time on a
computer screen. They were to see each word and say it aloud into a microphone.
They were not told why they were recording the sound of the words nor told what
was to happen in the return session two weeks later.
In the follow-up session, students were randomly presented
20 of the words from the first session, according to the four groups (read
silently, hear another say the words, hear the self-recording, or actively say
each word). Immediately after this, students took a self-paced recognition test
to identify how many of the study words were recognized.
Upon testing, a clear gradient of improvement was evident
with increased production effect.
That is, poorest recognition occurred with silent reading and best
recognition occurred with actively saying the words.
Why is reading aloud more effective than hearing yourself or
others reading? The authors concluded that the self-reference and self-control
over speaking produces more engagement with the words. The deeper the
engagement, the better the memory. They also attribute the self-referencing as
the explanation for why rehearsal helps memory formation. We do it ourselves
and do it in our “mind’s ear.”
I think there are other implications of these findings. Other
research establishes that rehearsal should require forced recall, rather than
just passively looking over the study material. The data shown here suggests
that rehearsal would be even more effective if we forced ourselves to recall by
stating the material out loud.
Note that this study measured recognition memory. This is
similar to what students do when taking a multiple-choice test: they are given
prompts to see if they recognize the correct choice. This is much less
demanding than requiring the student to generate the right answer “from scratch,”
as in fill-in-the-blank type of question. I would expect that open-ended
testing would reveal an even greater benefit from production effects, such as
reading aloud. Optimal benefit would probably come from reading aloud from
notes that the student took at the time of initial exposure to new information.
Source:
Forrin, N. D., and MacLeod, C. M. (2017) This time it’s
personal: the memory benefit of hearing oneself. Memory. DOI:
10.1080/09658211.1383434.
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