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Doodling May Boost Memory
In a boring meeting? Doodling as
you listen may help you remember important info
By Miranda
Hitti WebMD Health News
The next time you're stuck on hold or zoning out
during a dull meeting, you might want to reach
for a pen and doodle -- and not just to ease
your boredom.
Doodling might help you remember snippets of key
information that's mentioned in those
conversations, a new study shows.
The study comes from Jackie Andrade, PhD, of the
School of Psychology at England's University of
Plymouth.
Andrade asked 40 adults who had just finished
another psychology test to listen to a "rather
dull" audio tape play for two and a half minutes
and to jot down the names of people who would
definitely or probably be coming to a party,
according to the tape.
As they listened to the tape, half of the
participants were encouraged to doodle on a
piece of paper. They didn't have to draw
freehand; instead, they were given a sheet of
paper filled with outlines of squares and
circles to shade in. For comparison, the other
half of the group didn't doodle while listening
to the tape.
A minute after the tape finished, participants
took a pop quiz in which they had to recall the
party-goers' names and places that were
mentioned on the tape. They had not been told to
listen for the places.
The doodlers recalled an average of "7.5 pieces
of information (names and places), 29% more than
the [average] of 5.8 recalled by the control
group," Andrade writes.
Why was doodling helpful? Maybe it kept
participants more alert while they listened to
the boring recording, Andrade suggests.
"This study suggests that in everyday life
doodling may be something we do because it helps
to keep us on track with a boring task, rather
than being an unnecessary distraction that we
should try to resist doing," Andrade says in a
news release.
The study appears online in Applied Cognitive
Psychology.
© WebMD Inc. All rights reserved.
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"This study suggests that in everyday life
doodling may be something we do because it helps
to keep us on track with a boring task, rather
than being an unnecessary distraction that we
should try to resist doing"
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