The internet is eating your memory, but something better is taking its place
"We might be losing some abilities between a sea of information, but we might be developing new ones..."
Erreh Svaia
Taken From: Science Alert
By: Saima Noreen
In the
years since the world started going digital, one of the big changes has been
that we don’t need to remember very much. Why risk forgetting a partner’s
birthday or a dinner date with a close friend when you can commit the details
to your computer, laptop, smartphone or tablet and get a reminder at the
appropriate time?
Paul
McCartney gave a useful insight into this in an interview over the summer. He
claimed that back in the 1960s The Beatles may have written dozens of songs
that were never released because he and John Lennon would forget the songs the
following morning.
"We would write a song and just have
to remember it. And there was always the risk that we’d just forget it. If the
next morning you couldn’t remember it - it was gone."
How
different to the way he records now then, when he can "form the thing,
have it all finished, remember it all, go in pretty quickly and record
it".
With technology
now well ingratiated into our everyday life, researchers have been
investigating the lasting impact that it is having on the way that we learn and
remember information. Some research has suggested that our reliance on
technology and the internet is leading to “digital amnesia”, where individuals
are no longer able to retain information as a result of storing information on
a digital device.
In one
study, for example, 1,000 consumers aged 16 and over were asked about their use
of technology. It found that 91 percent of them depended on the internet and
digital devices as a tool for remembering. In another survey of 6000 people,
the same study found that 71 percent of people could not remember their
children’s phone numbers and 57 percent could not remember their work phone
number. This suggests that relying on digital devices to remember information
is impairing our own memory systems.
The upgrade
But before
we mourn this apparent loss of memory, more recent studies suggest that we may
be adapting. One such study from 2011 conducted a series of experiments looking
at how our memories rely on computers. In one of them, participants were asked
to type a series of statements, such as "an ostrich’s eye is bigger than
its brain".
Half of
them were told that their documents would be saved, and half were told that
they would not. Everyone was then tested to see if they could remember what
they had typed. Those who had been told their work would be saved were
significantly poorer at remembering the information.
In another
experiment, participants were asked to type a series of statements that would
be saved in specific folders. They were then asked to recall the statements and
the folders in which the files were located. Overall, they were better at
recalling the file locations than the statements. The conclusion from the two
experiments? Technology has changed the way we organise information so that we
only remember details which are no longer available, and prioritise the
location of information over the content itself.
Group mind
This idea
that individuals prioritise where information is located has led some
researchers to propose that digital devices and the internet have become a form
of transactive memory. This idea, which dates back to the 1980s, refers to a
group memory that is superior to that of any individual.
According
to this account, individuals can collectively store and distribute information
using a shared store of knowledge. This store of knowledge means that
individuals can access details that they may not know themselves by knowing
that another individual remembers it, thus enhancing what information is
available to them by communicating with other people. In the same way,
individuals develop a transactive memory with the internet and rely on it for
information by focusing on where details are located rather than the details
themselves.
More recent
research has extended this line of work and found that saving information on a
computer not only changes how our brains interact with it, but also makes it
easier to learn new information. In a study published last year, the
participants were presented with two files that each contained a list of words.
They were asked to memorise both lists. Half of the participants were asked to
save the first file before moving on to the next list, while the others had to
close it without saving.
The
experiment revealed that the participants recalled significantly more
information from the second file if they had saved the previous file. This
suggests that by saving or 'offloading' information on to a computer, we are
freeing up cognitive resources that enable us to memorise and recall new
information instead.
In sum,
anyone worrying that technology is wrecking one of our most important abilities
should take some reassurance from these findings. It doesn’t necessarily mean
that there is no cause for concern: for instance McCartney said in the same
interview that the songs in the 1960s that did make it to the recording studio
were the most memorable ones. So it is possible that the lack of technology
made The Beatles better songwriters.
But it may
be that just as oral storytelling was usurped by the written word, having
digital devices to outsource our memories means that it is no longer necessary
for us to try to remember everything. And if we can now remember more with a
little help from our technology friends, that is arguably a great step forward.
Rather than worrying about what we have lost, perhaps we need to focus on what
we have gained.
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