Why Reading Aloud Helps You Remember More Information
Mental
Floss: 12.01.201 by
Shaunacy Ferro
If
you're trying to commit something to memory, you shouldn't just read the same
flashcard over and over. You should read it aloud, according to a new study
from the University of Waterloo in Ontario, Canada.
The
research, published in the journal Memory, finds that the act of reading and speaking
text aloud is a more effective way to remember information than reading it silently or just
hearing it read aloud. The dual effect of both speaking and hearing helps
encode the memory more strongly, the study reports. The new research builds on previous work on the so-called production effect by Waterloo psychologist Colin
MacLeod, who is also one of the current paper's authors.
The
current study tested 95 college students over the course of two semesters,
asking them to remember as many words as possible from a list of 160 nouns. At
one session, they read a list of words into a microphone, then returned two
weeks later for a follow-up. In some situations, the participants read the
words presented to them aloud, while in others, they either heard their own
recorded voice played back to them, heard recordings of others reading the
words, or read the words silently to themselves. =Afterward, they were tested
to see how much they remembered from the list.
The
participants remembered more words if they had read them aloud compared to all
other conditions, even the one where people heard their own voices reading the
words. READ
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