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Blind people excel at serial recall.


Blindness from birth fosters a superior ability to learn and remember ordered sequences of information, a new study indicates.

Blind people recall much longer word sequences than sighted individuals do, report Noa Raz RAZ Remise à Zéro (French: return to zero)
RAZ Read as Zero
 of the Hebrew University Hebrew University of Jerusalem, at Mt. Scopus, Givat Ram, Ein Karem, and Rehovot, Israel; coeducational. First proposed in 1882, formally opened 1925. It is the world's largest Jewish university and is noted for its work on the Dead Sea Scrolls.  in Jerusalem Jerusalem (jər`sələm, –zələm), Heb. Yerushalayim, Arab. Al Quds, city (1994 pop. 578,800), capital of Israel.  and his colleagues. The researchers propose that the advantage stems from blind people constantly practicing serial-memory strategies in daily life. For instance, a sightless person gets from one place to another by remembering and noting specific nonvisual Adj. 1. nonvisual - not resulting in vision; "nonvisual stimuli"
invisible, unseeable - impossible or nearly impossible to see; imperceptible by the eye; "the invisible man"; "invisible rays"; "an invisible hinge"; "invisible mending"
 cues along a particular route.

The researchers studied 19 adults who had been born blind and 19 adults with normal vision. Each volunteer heard a list of 20 words and was instructed to recall the words and their original order. This procedure was repeated four times to promote learning of the list.

In various sessions, blind individuals recalled 20 to 35 percent more words from the list than sighted people did. That advantage more than doubled for correctly remembering sequences of 2 or more words, and nearly quadrupled for recalling sequences of 11 or more words, the investigators report in the July July: see month.  3 Current Biology biology, the science that deals with living things. It is broadly divided into zoology, the study of animal life, and botany, the study of plant life. Subdivisions of each of these sciences include cytology (the study of cells), histology (the study of tissues), .

Blind participants displayed better memories than did their sighted counterparts for all words, not just the first and last ones in the list. In the scientists' view, this suggests that the memory success of the blind relies on thinking of the list as a word chain and on forming meaningful associations between adjacent words.--B.B.
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Title Annotation:BEHAVIOR
Publication:Science News
Date:Jul 7, 2007
Words:237
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