Want a Better Memory? Doodle!

By Jennifer Goddard | March 23, 2009

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Yvonne Adele helps organisations build a culture of ideas by teaching people at all levels to access their untapped creative thinking skills.

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.

Talkback 2 Talkbacks

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.
ZDNet Gravatar
Fred H Schlegel
03/24/2009 07:10 AM
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...?)
ZDNet Gravatar
hmmm...
03/24/2009 10:42 AM

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