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Want a Better Memory? Doodle!

March 23rd, 2009 @ 9:43 pm

Categories: Head First Innovation

Tags: Phone, Memory, Square, Conference Call, Presentation, Tablets, Telecom & Utilities, Hardware, Notebooks & Tablets, Jennifer Goddard

Caught yourself daydreaming during a boring conference call or long meeting?

Are you a doodler?

Far from being a waste of time, doodling can make a boring phone call, presentation or speech easier to memorise, according to recent research at Plymouth University in the UK.

Many of us start to daydream when bored. A simple task, like doodling, while on a conference call is sufficient to stop daydreaming without affecting performance. Volunteers were given a doodling task while listening to a dull phone message. The doodlers were 29 percent better at remembering details than non-doodlers.

I would say that there are at least four categories of doodlers:

  1. Creating borders around text.
  2. Recurring shapes of squares, swirls, flowers, buildings, etc.
  3. Specific images related to the conversation.
  4. Creating structures and connecting thinking — as sort of Mind Mapping (an acceptable form of doodling in meetings as it is considered as “Note-Taking”).

I even doodle during my own PowerPoint presentations! To make my presentations more memorable I doodle, highlight and interactively capture information on the screen during presentations. I use a Tablet PC with a pen. You can do the same with your mouse (when in Slide Show mode, click on the options in the bottom left-hand corner and you can turn on the feature to highlight text or draw shapes) or small USB Drawing Tablet.

What doodles do you do? Are you a square or flower person? I would be interested to find out if you draw the same shape every time or not.

Jennifer Goddard is the director of the Buzan Centre in Australia and New Zealand and co-founder of Mindwerx International. In "Head First Innovation", Jennifer Goddard looks at ways managers, innovation champions and entrepreneurs can open their minds to new ideas and ways of doing things that will give them the competitive advantage. You can find out more about her at fuzz2buzz.
 
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  •  
    1

    Fred H Schlegel

    03/24/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Want a Better Memory? Doodle!

    For a long time it was simple creatures and
    landscapishy-squiggles until I noticed I was heading
    uncomfortably close to scenes that could be 'miss-
    understood' as depictions of current meeting dynamics
    (or participants). Now I'm split...mind mapping when
    we're all in the room together, but conference calls help
    keep the doodling juices flowing.

  •  
    2

    hmmm...

    03/24/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Want a Better Memory? Doodle!

    The meaning of my doodles is pretty transparent. I take notes, but in between, while I am waiting for something worthy of note-taking, I flip over the paper and draw shoe prints going in a straight line across the page. (Let's keep moving...?)

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  • Blogger Thumbnail Jennifer Goddard Jennifer Goddard is the director of the Buzan Centre in Australia and New Zealand and co-founder of Mindwerx International. In "Head First Innovation", Jennifer Goddard looks at ways managers, innovation champions and entrepreneurs can open their minds to new ideas and ways of doing things that will give them the competitive advantage. You can find out more about her at fuzz2buzz. more »

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