Internet Psychologist Graham Jones
From the media? CLICK HERE FOR MY MEDIA INFORMATION

Search this site


 

Get these
articles sent
directly to you
each day

Your Email Address:

 

RSS Feed RSS Subscribe

Add to Google

Add to My Yahoo

Subscribe in NewsGator Online

Add to My AOL

Subscribe in Bloglines

Add to Technorati Favorites

Link With Us - Web Directory

blogoriffic.com

BRDTracker

Add to Pageflakes

http://www.wikio.com



Add To Google Toolbar

 

Previous Articles

Make more money online by establishing your expert...


Stop putting it off - start your blog now!


Corporate web sites starting to get more viewers t...


Your web site almost certainly has poor accessibil...


Internet marketers in the UK - do they know someth...


What is a perfect web site?


The Internet is a lifestyle choice: that means opp...


Make your web site into a community


Learning from the Threshers Internet voucher exper...


Why you need more than one blog


 

Archives

 

Topics

Internet Marketing

Blogging

Social Networking

Internet Shopping

Online success

Internet Psychology

Future of the Internet

 

 

Your Free Guide
to Internet Success

 

Free Guide To Internet Success

 

Claim your free guide to success in the age of the Internet

 

Name

Email

 

 

 

Thursday, December 14, 2006

Blogging, the Internet and your memory

Years ago in the dim dark distant past of psychology - the 1970s - we thought that human memory was a chemically mediated function within the brain. Now, there is a growing belief that memory is based on DNA and much of it could therefore be distributed throughout our body. For instance, do you actually need your brain to be involved in remembering how to walk? Or can your muscles of your legs be left to do that for you? Research suggests there is much more brain activity when we are learning a skill than when we are using that skill. So where is the memory for that skill if there is less brain activity? It must be somewhere else in our body.

So what has all this to do with the Internet? Well, the Internet - particularly blogs, picture library sites, social networking site and so on - are extensions of our brain. No longer do you have to remember what you wore at last year's Christmas party, all you need to do is look at the pictures on your online library. No longer do you have to remember who your friends are - you can check the list and contact them directly from your social networking pages. No longer do you have to remember what you said at a business meeting, you can store it on your private blog. In other words, many people are dumping what would normally be stored in their brains onto an electronic store somewhere in the world. That means our memories are now being distributed globally. Part of my memory, for instance, is on my computer in my office; part is on my blog hosting server in Germany and some of it is on computers in Canada and America.

Gordon Bell is going even further. He is a Microsoft researcher who has recorded every single moment of his life for the past seven years on computers. Want to know what you said if you had met Gordon five years ago? He can tell you. Want to know what happened during a phone call in 2001? Gordon's system can tell you. Of course,he can't remember everything, but his extended and distributed memory can.

Just think about your own life: do you have a blog, do you store backups online, do you have a laptop with meeting notes on it? In the past you would have tried to remember all this information but now, by distributing our memory into an electronic global system, we have near perfect recall. No longer do you have to rely on your brain, you can use the Internet as part of your memory.

Psychologists are only just getting to grips with the concept of distributed memory within our bodies; now we have to think about the concept of our memory existing outside our bodies. Fascinating stuff and you can read more about it at Fast Company magazine.

Labels:


Add this story to:

| BlinkList | BlogMarks | del.icio.us | Digg | Furl | Google | LinkRoll | Lycos |

| ma.gnolia | Netscape | Newsvine | Ning | reddit | Simpy | Spurl | Squidoo | Wink |


Email this story to your friends:

 

Readers' Comments:

Post a Comment

 

 

Permalink: Blogging, the Internet and your memory