We humans too behave, act and learn something say consciously or unconsciously from other living natural habitats, like for example as bees move from one flower to another for collecting honey or birds fly from one branch to another in search of food in the same manner we humans store our memory in form of clusters and move between them.
On basis of these finding statements Indiana University and the University of Warwick researchers have identified similarity that as animals search for food in the same fashion humans search within their plots or patches of memory for items they want to recall and the ones who have best searching strategies can recall things much faster and easily.
While doing a research study on a group of people including 46 men and 96 women who were asked to provide names of as many animals as possible in three minute.It was then found that the result was similar after comparing their pattern of search out with that of animals who stay at one place to collect food for a particular period of time and then move out to another location for food like humans search information within the memory patches.
The response was calculated on bases of their answers that were found inline with one another in terms of language; this proved there are patches of memory identified by BEAGLE, a semantic space model and scheme of categorization.
Dr Thomas Hill a professor in psychology says.
The key strategy for having better recalling capability is to have knowledge of estimated time duration for switching between the clusters. This means that if you are trying to remember something,calculatedly move on between the patches of memory if you do not find the item to be recalled in one particular patch.
No comments:
Post a Comment