[blindza] fw: Blind people are 'serial memory' whizzes.
- From: "Jacob Kruger" <jacobk@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- To: "BlindZA" <blindza@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 21 Jun 2007 22:54:35 +0200
Slightly more life-relevant version of the previous article...
---original message---
Blind people are 'serial memory' whizzes.
Compared to people with normal vision, those who were blind at birth tend to
have
excellent memories. Now, a new study reported online on June 21st in the
journal Current
Biology, a publication of Cell Press, shows that blind individuals are
particular whizzes
when it comes to remembering things in the right order.
The findings are a good example of the familiar adage that "practice makes
perfect" and
reveal that mental capabilities may be refined or adjusted in order to
compensate for the
lack of a sensory input, according to researchers Noa Raz and Ehud Zohary of
Hebrew
University.
"Our opinion is that the superior serial memory of the blind is most likely
a result of
practice," Zohary said. "In the absence of vision, the world is experienced
as a sequence
of events. Since the blind constantly use serial-memory strategies in
everyday
circumstances, they tend to develop superior skills."
For example, the blind tend to navigate the world by forming "route-like"
sequential
representations. Blind people also rely on serial-memory strategies to
identify otherwise
indistinguishable objects, such as different brands of yogurt that vary only
in their
labeling, the researchers noted. According to their own reports, in order to
correctly
choose a desired item, the blind typically place objects in a fashioned
order and give
them ordinal tags, such as "the 3rd item on the left". Thus, a memory for
the order in
which items are encountered may be especially important for blind people's
ability to
create mental pictures of a scene.
In the new study, the researchers tested the performance of 19 congenitally
blind
individuals and individually matched sighted controls in two types of memory
tasks:
item memory and serial memory. In the item-memory tasks, subjects were asked
to identify
20 words from a list they heard. In the serial-memory tasks, subjects had to
remember
not only the words, but also their ordinal position in the list.
Those who were blind recalled more words than the sighted, indicating a
better memory
overall, they found. Their greatest advantage, however, was the ability to
remember longer
word sequences according to their original order.
The blind individuals' remarkable edge in item recall resulted not from a
specific
advantage in remembering the first words in the list, or the most recent
words. Rather,
the blind showed a better memory for all of the words, regardless of where
they fell. That
result suggested that the key to their success may lie in representing item
lists as word
chains, perhaps by generating associations between adjacent items.
The researchers said they plan to further explore the underlying mental
processes
responsible for the differences in memory skill by using imaging techniques
that measure
brain activity.
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