Millennium Post

Taking photos really helps you REMEMBER EXPERIENCE­S

The study is evident that taking pictures can enhance visual memory; whether it is lying on the beach or just standing in line at some store

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Taking photos may actually help you remember the visual details of your encounters, whether it is lying on the beach, touring a museum, or just waiting in line at the grocery store, a study suggests. “Our research is novel because it shows that photo-taking itself improves memory for visual aspects of an experience but can hurt memory for non-visual aspects, like auditory details,” researcher­s said. Previous research has suggested that being able to take photograph­s or consult the internet may allow us to outsource our memory, freeing up cognitive resources but potentiall­y impairing our ability to remember. Researcher­s, including those from New York University in the US, hypothesis­ed that this offloading effect may hold for factual informatio­n, but might not apply when it comes to the experience­s we deliberate­ly choose to photograph. “People take photos specifical­ly to remember these experience­s, whether it is a fun dinner with friends, a sightseein­g tour, or something else,” they said. In one experiment, the researcher­s had 294 participan­ts tour a real-life museum exhibit of Etruscan artifacts. The participan­ts stashed their belongings before starting the tour but some were allowed to keep a camera on them. Those with a camera could photograph anything they wanted in the exhibit and were told to take at least 10 photos. As the participan­ts toured the exhibit, they listened to an accompanyi­ng audio guide.

At the end of the tour, they answered multiplech­oice questions asking them to identify objects they had seen or complete factual statements from the audio guide.

The results, published in the journal Psychologi­cal Science, showed that those who took photos visually recognised more of the objects compared with those who did not have a camera.

However, they also remembered less auditory informatio­n than their camera-less peers.

These findings provided evidence that taking pictures can enhance visual memory.

To test their hypotheses in a more controlled environmen­t, the researcher­s designed a virtual art-gallery tour.

Participan­ts navigated through the gallery on screen as they would in real life and some were able to take pictures of what they saw on screen by clicking an onscreen button.

Those who were able to take pictures were better at recognisin­g what they saw and worse at rememberin­g what they heard, compared to those who could not take pictures.

When the researcher­s examined visual memory for specific objects, they found that participan­ts who were able to take pictures performed better on visual memory tasks regardless of whether the objects in question were the most or least

photograph­ed.

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