Today.Az » Weird / Interesting » Why do we forget names?
08 June 2016 [14:24] - Today.Az
By Tom Stafford Forgetting names is one of our memory’s most common failures
– but there are ways to make them stick, says psychologist Tom Stafford. A reader, Dan, asks "Why do we forget people's names
when we first meet them? I can remember all kinds of other details about a
person but completely forget their name. Even after a lengthy, in-depth
conversation. It's really embarrassing. Fortunately the answer involves learning something
fundamental about the nature of memory. It also provides a solution that can
help you to avoid the embarrassing social situation of having spoken to someone
for an hour, only to have forgotten their name. To know why this happens you have to recognise that our
memories aren't a simple filing system, with separate folders for each kind of
information and a really brightly coloured folder labelled "Names". Rather, our minds are associative. They are built out of
patterns of interconnected information. This iswhy
we daydream: you notice that the book you're reading was printed in Paris, and that Paris is
home to the Eiffel Tower, that your cousin Mary visited
last summer, and Mary loves pistachio ice-cream. Say, I wonder if she ate a
pistachio ice cream while up the Tower? It goes on and on like that, each item
connected to every other, not by logic but by coincidence of time, place, how
you learnt the information and what it means. The same associative network means you can guess a question
from the answer. Answer: "Eiffel Tower?" Question: “Paris's most famous landmark.” This makes
memory useful, because you can often go as easily from the content to the label
as vice versa: "what is in the top drawer?" isn't a very interesting
question, but it becomes so when you want the answer "where are my
keys?". So memory is built like this on purpose, and now we can see
the reason why we forget names. Our memories are amazing, but they respond to
how many associations we make with new information, not with how badly we want
to remember it. When you meet someone for the first time you learn their
name, but for your memory it is probably an arbitrary piece of information
unconnected to anything else you know, and unconnected to all the other things
you later learn about them. After your conversation, in which you probably
learn about their job, and their hobbies, and their family or whatever, all
this information becomes linked in your memory. Imagine you are talking to a
guy with a blue shirt who likes fishing and works selling cars, but would
rather give it up to sell fishing gear. Now if you can remember one bit of
information ("sell cars") you can follow the chain to the others
("sells cars but wants to give it up", "wants to give it up to
sell fishing gear", "loves fishing" and so on). The trouble is
that your new friend's name doesn't get a look in because it is simply a piece
of arbitrary information you didn’t connect to anything else about the
conversation. Fortunately, there are ways to strengthen those links so it
does become entrenched with the other memories. Here's how to remember the
name, using some basic principles of memory. First, you should repeat any name said to you. Practice is
one of the golden rules of learning: more practice makes stronger memories. In
addition, when you use someone's name you are linking it to yourself, in the
physical act of saying it, but also to the current topic of the conversation in
your memory ("So, James, just what is it about fishing that makes you love
it so much?"). Second, you should try to link the name you have just learnt
to something you already know. It doesn't matter if the link is completely
silly, it is just important that you find some connection to help the name
stick in memory. For example, maybe the guy is called James, and your high
school buddy was called James, and although this guy is wearing a blue shirt,
high school James only ever wore black, so he'd never wear blue. It's a silly
made up association, but it can help you remember. Finally, you need to try to link their name to something
else about them. If it was me I'd grab the first thing to come to mind to
bridge between the name and something I've learnt about them. For example,
James is a sort of biblical name, you get the King James bible after all, and
James begins with J, just like Jonah in the bible who was swallowed by the
whale, and this James likes fishing, but I bet he prefers catching them to
being caught by them. It doesn't matter if the links you make are outlandish or
weird. You don't have to tell anyone. In fact, probably it is best if you don't
tell anyone, especially your new friend! But the links will help create a web
of association in your memory, and that web will stop their name falling out of
your mind when it is time to introduce them to someone else.
And if you're sceptical, try this quick test. I've mentioned
three names during this article. I bet you can remember James, who isn't Jonah.
And probably you can remember cousin Mary (or at least what kind of ice cream
she likes). But you can you remember the name of the reader who asked the
question? That's the only one I introduced without elaborating some connections
around the name, and that's why I'll bet it is the only one you've forgotten.
/By BBC/
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