Natural Beauty

eg: UK or Brides UK or Classical Art or Buy Music or Spirituality
 
eg: UK or Brides UK or Classical Art or Buy Music or Spirituality
 
Business & Money
Technology
Women
Health
Education
Family
Travel
Cars
Entertainment
SD Editorials
Online Guide and article directory site.
Foodeditorials.com
Over 15,000 recipes & editorials on food.
Lyricadvisor.com
Get 100,000 Lyric & Albums.
  • Business & Money
    • A Guide to Business
    • Guide to Finance
    • Ideas for Marketing
    • Legal Guide
    • Guide to Insurance
    • Lettre De Motivation
    • Guide to the Stock Market
    • Human Resource Career
    • Sales Marketing
    • Forex & Trading
    • Advertising & Marketing
    • Startup Guide
  • Technology
    • Guide to Technology
    • Cell Phones
    • Computer Software
    • IT Hardwares
    • Internet
    • Online Security
    • Cameras
    • Search Engine Optimization
    • Science & Technology
  • Women
    • Guide to Women
    • Relationship Advice
    • Marriage
    • Jewelry
    • Pregnancy
    • Fashion Style
    • Divorce Guide
    • Wedding Guide
    • Dating Guide
    • Natural Beauty
  • Health
    • Guide to Health
    • Guide to Medical
    • Plastic Surgery
    • Weight Loss
    • Sports
    • Body Wellness
    • Cancer Treatment
    • Common Illness
    • Health & Lifestyle
  • Education
    • Military Service
    • Politics and Policy
    • Arts & Humanities
    • Education and Teaching
    • Learn Languages
    • Colleges & Universities
  • Family
    • Quality Home Improvement
    • Hobbies and Interests
    • Family Guide to
    • Pet Guide
    • Loans Guide
    • Credit Cards
    • Gardening Guide
    • Home Security
    • Real Estate
    • Home Decor
    • Gift & Present
  • Travel
    • The Travel Guide
    • Adventure Travel
    • Cruise Ships
    • Beach Holiday
    • Travel Accommodation
    • Holiday Destinations
  • Cars
    • Information on Cars
    • Traffic Violations
    • Auto Insurance
    • Trailers
    • Sport Cars
    • The Bikes
  • Entertainment
    • Entertainment Guide
    • World Music
    • Photo & Video
    • Television & Games

Improve Short Term Memory

    View: 
Elaboration and repetition are the most common ways of creating that personal interaction. Elaboration involves creating a rich context for the experience by adding together visual, auditory, and other information about the fact. By weaving a web of information around that fact, you create multiple access points to that piece of information. On the other hand, repetition drills in the same pathway over and over until it is a well-worn path that you can easily find.



One common technique used by students, is actually, not that helpful. Mnemonic techniques of using the first letter of each word in a series won't help you remember the actual words. It will help you remember the order of words you already know. The phrase My Very Energetic Mother Just Screamed Utter Nonsense can help you remember the order the planets in our solar system, but it won't help you recall the individual planet names: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune.

These techniques do help you improve your memory on a behavioral level, but not on a fundamental brain structure level. The main reason it gets harder for you to learn and remember new things as you age is that your brain's processing speed slows down as you get older. It becomes harder to do more than one thing at the same time, so it's easier to get confused. Your brain may also become less flexible, so it's harder to change learning strategies in mid-stream. All these things mean it becomes harder to focus. Until now, there is little one can do to significantly improve processing speed, but there are ways to improve learning performance, even when processing speed slows.

Focus

Alertness, focus, concentration, motivation, and heightened awareness are largely a matter of attitude. Focus takes effort. Please remember (!) that most memory problems have really little to do with memory itself. They come from a failure to focus properly on the task at hand.

If you want to learn or remember something, concentrate on just that one thing. Tune out everything else. The harder the task, the more important it is to tune out distractions. (We all have heard some people claiming that they can do their homework better with the TV or radio on, don't believe it. Any speech or speech-like sounds automatically use up part of your brain's attention capacity, whether you are aware of it or not.) In other words, it can be hard to do more than one thing at once, and it naturally gets harder as you get older. What will help is to make sure you don't get distracted until you've finished what you have to do.

Strategy: When you learn something new, take breaks so that the facts won't interfere with one another as you study them. Have you been to a movie double feature recently? then you'll know that it is hard to remember the plot and details of the first movie immediately after seeing the second. Interference also works the other way. Often we experience that when a friend gets a new phone number the old one is so familiar and automatic for us that it is tough to learn the new one.

Engage

Your brain remembers things by their meaning. If you spend a little effort extra up front to create meaning, you'll need less effort later to recall it. when you discover a new word - for example, "phocine" - your brain has to work harder"phocine" - your brain has to work harder. First, you have to remember how to spell it long enough to look it up in a dictionary. There, you'll see it means "seal-like" and it's pronounced "fo-sine." Now picture a seal in your mind and repeat the word aloud. Even say "Fo! Fo! Fo!" aloud like a seal barking. The sound of the word, its spelling, the image of a seal, and the barking all work together to form memory links. The more links the better to help you trigger the word later on, when you want to use it to describe, say, a sunbather in a black one-piece.

Strategy: Say you're on vacation in Maui, staying at a beachfront hotel in room #386. How do you remember that? Method number one: Pause for a minute to take a mental snapshot of your room door viewed from an outside vantage point. Then, when you return to that same vantage point, you'll know which door is yours. Method number two: Stop and think for a minute. You're on the third floor, which is the top floor of the hotel, so the number 3 is easy. Now for the 8 and the 6. The expression "to eighty-six" comes to mind - as in to get rid of, do away with, or throw out. As in what your boss will do to you if you decide to spend an extra week in Maui. Done.

Copyright (c) 2007 SharpBrains
Improve Short Term Memory
Learning need not be a chore for the young. In fact, you have the time, the process of learning can be expressed as simple games and the children will be eager to participate. You will be pleasantly surprised that they will have fun while their minds are actively engaged. Their capacity for learning and absorbing new information is great when they are young.

The same theory works for improving a child's short term memory. Turn a memory exercise into a game, and they'll be happy to play, not even realizing that they're ingraining information in their brain.

The Memory Game - Most of us would have played a version of the aptly named card game 'Memory'. You place a deck of cards face down and turn two over at a time. If they match, they remain face up, and you continue. If the cards don't match, they get turned face down again, and the next person begins their turn.

This game is a great example of training yourself to remember something ' in this case, in order to win the game. When it is repeated consistently, it is useful as it improves your short term memory. Children will happily play this game, never realizing they are improving their short term memory. You can decide to use the normal playing cards, or unique deck of cards from toy shops, or even make your own deck containing knowledge you want them to absorb. Soon, you'll notice an improvement in their short term memory when the children begin picking the correct cards almost all the time.

Auditory Cues - Simple games can also help children enhance their auditory short term memory. Again, by making the exercise into a game, children will improve their short term memory without even noticing that they're learning.

A simple game that can be used is to repeat a series of items, like a list of sports, colors, or just about anything you can think of. Say the items once to the children, then get them to write down, in order, the items you have just mentioned. Each time you repeat this exercise, increase the amount of items. Over time, the children will be able to repeat the list, in the exact order, without any trouble. Games like this are a great way to improve the short term memory in children, and the good thing is that they are fun, they can be played just about anywhere, with little or no materials required.

To create an incentive when trying to increase a child's short term memory, implement a reward system for the games you are playing. A child will instinctively try harder to win a game when they know there is a reward involved.

Stickers, stamps and small prizes are all inexpensive, but effective, in encouraging children to play games that increase short term memory. When children pit themselves against other children, such positive rivalry can help improve short term memory.
More Articles from
Interesting Health Tips
34 Inch Bar Stools
3d Concert Experience Part 1
40 Bottle Wine Cellar
5 Hour Energy Shot
5 Htp Weight Loss
5 Weeks Pregnant Back Pain
50 Fast Digital Camera
50 Years Of The Greatest Hit Singles
7 Day Body Detox
7 Days Weight Loss
8 Glasses A Day
A 12 Month Calendar
A 1200 Calorie Diet
A Bad Hair Cut
A Bowl Of Cereal
A Diet To Loose Weight
A Girl Playing Hard To Get
A Good Ab Workout
A Good Exercise Program
A Good Healthy Breakfast
» More on
Health Tips
  • Related Articles
  • Author
  • Most Popular
•About Short Term Memory, by James Gunaseelan
•Bad Short Term Memory, by Gilbert Imlay
•Cause Short Term Memory Loss, by Steve Madigan
•Causes Of Short Term Memory Loss, by Paul Courtney
•How To Improve Short Term Memory, by Kevin Sinclair
About Author
Both Alvaro Fernandez & Moses Wright are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.

Alvaro Fernandez has sinced written about articles on various topics from Aging, Brain and Aspen Travel. SharpBrains Brain Fitness Expert, , provides the most reliable science-based informat. Alvaro Fernandez's top article generates over 201000 views. to your Favourites.

Moses Wright has sinced written about articles on various topics from Brain Injury, Credit Loans and Diabetes Treatment. Moses Wright knows that is vital for any children education development. He sets up a site to help parents with. Moses Wright's top article generates over 60500 views. to your Favourites.
Can A Tampon Get Stuck
Setup a simple squeeze page to capture the contact information and keep in contact with your customers. You may very well be making 10 times what you are making now
 
A Guide to Business | Guide to Technology | Guide to Women | Guide to Health | Family Guide to | Travel & Vacations | Information on Cars

EditorialToday Natural Beauty has 3 sub sections. Such as Acne & Skin, Women and Beauty and Beauty Tips. With over 20,000 authors and writers, we are a well known online resource and editorial services site in United Kingdom, Canada & America . Here, we cover all the major topics from self help guide to A Guide to Business, Guide to Finance, Ideas for Marketing, Legal Guide, Lettre De Motivation, Guide to Insurance, Guide to Health, Guide to Medical, Military Service, Guide to Women, Pet Guide, Politics and Policy , Guide to Technology, The Travel Guide, Information on Cars, Entertainment Guide, Family Guide to, Hobbies and Interests, Quality Home Improvement, Arts & Humanities and many more.
About Editorial Today | Contact Us | Terms of Use | Submit an Article | Our Authors