Elaborative encoding


Elaborative encoding is a mnemonic that relates to-be-remembered information to previously existing memories and knowledge.
One can make such connections visually, spatially, semantically or acoustically. Practitioners use multiple techniques, such as the method of loci, the link system, the peg-word method, PAO, etc., to store information in long-term memory and to make it easier to recall this information in the future. Many experiments have been done in order to examine elaborative encoding, some of them are listed below

Types

Method of Loci

The Method of Loci is a mnemonic device that relies on spatial relationships between “loci” to arrange and recollect memorial content. An example of MOL could be used to remember a grocery list by placing items needed in well known places in your bedroom. And then when you want to recall what you need, mentally revisit your bedroom and pick up the items that you have mentally placed.
In a study published in 2007, Jerome Yesavage and Terrence Rose added another step in using the Method of Loci which proved to help recall. In speaking of the method, they instructed their test group as such: “they were taught, in addition, to make a personal judgment of the pleasantness of each visual image association. As predicted, subjects in the Loci Plus Judgment group showed greater improvement in their recall following instruction in the mnemonic.”

Link System

The point of the Link System is to link each successive pair of items in an interacting image so that recall of one item in the list should cue recall of the next. In order to illustrate this technique, we return to the grocery list example. If you have milk and eggs to remember, you could link the two by remembering they’re both white in color. This connection aids the retrieval process.

Peg-Word Method

The Peg-Word Method is based on principles like those embodied in the method of loci. The main difference is that instead of a series of places to be used as storage "locations," one memorizes a set of pegs or hooks on which one can then "hang" the information to be memorized. As with the MOL instead of placing grocery items in a room, imagine that room has “pegs” on which are the items desired to be remembered.
A 1986 experiment tested 73 fifth graders on minerals. For one group they just had free study these minerals, for another group they studied using the Peg-word Method. These were their findings: “In all repetition conditions, mnemonic subjects significantly and substantially outperformed students who were given free study.”

PAO (Person, Action, Object)

For each item desired to memorize you assign a person, action or object. As you assign these things you create a “story line” that makes it easier to remember. In the example of a grocery list, one could assign eggs to Arnold Schwarzenegger, assign apples to “slicing,” and potatoes could be assigned to potatoes. Coming all together we have a story of Arnold Schwarzenegger slicing potatoes. The more distinguishable the relationship the easier it will be to retrieve.

Explanation

New information and stimuli tend to be best remembered when they can be associated with old memories and experiences. The efficiency and success of encoding is largely dependent upon the type of associations you choose to make. It is generally accepted that the more unusual and meaningful these elaborately encoded memories are, the more successful one will be in trying to retrieve them; this process is referred to as elaborative encoding. This type of encoding helps learning, as it constructs a rich set of integrated memories. Several theories suggest that the ability to recall information is heightened when physical and mental conditions match those experienced when the information was first encoded. For example, one will often be more successful in recalling a stimulus while chewing bubble gum if one were also chewing gum when one originally encoded the new stimulus. This has also been found to encompass drug and alcohol-induced recollection; people who encoded memories in an intoxicated state were more successful at recalling them when in a similar state later on. Verbal elaboration has also been shown to strengthen mental connections and boost retrieval. Because the intensity and effectiveness of encoded connections varies from person to person, it is often difficult to study with consistent results.

Experiments

Elaborative encoding is a beneficial tool to save and recall information. Since connections can be made whenever any new stimulus enters our perception, the scope of things that can be encoded is nearly limitless. In a practical sense, actively relating new information back to previous knowledge expands and intensifies the web of memories and mental connections. Elaboration has proven to be very effective when encoding names, faces, and locations. The ability to recall encoded memories has also been a useful tool in diagnosing mental disabilities such as Alzheimer's disease. Type mnemonics are often an effective way of transferring information into long-term memory and being able to recall it easily in the future. However, since most people do not actively train themselves on mnemonics after it has proved its usefulness these skills become less effective with age. Another method of elaborative encoding is sometimes referred to as the link system. By this method, individuals associate new information and stimuli with rich and exaggerated memories in order to make them easier to recall.