[Air-l] AoiR 4.0 Broadening the Band

Monica.Murero at MERIT.unimaas.nl Monica.Murero at MERIT.unimaas.nl
Sat Jul 12 02:14:02 PDT 2003


 
Hi Everybody !

Best of Luck to the Toronto team for a
terrific conference!!! Thanks Steve ! 

Monica Murero,
AoIR Conference Chair in Maastricht 
 AoIR Nominee for Vice-Presidency

http://aoir.org/forum





-----Original Message-----
From: Monica.Murero at MERIT.unimaas.nl
To: air-l at aoir.org
Sent: 7/9/03 2:12 AM
Subject: RE: [Air-l] Re: Impact of intense technology use on memorization' s
quality

 
Serge wrote: 
>Ones could think that the intense use of technology 
>could lead to a impairment of our memory.

Dear All,
Another way of looking at this: 

Intense use of technology affects different "types" of
memory. It also becomes an issue of what "type" of memory we 
are talking about: for example, we can have "everyday functioning", 
"low-level cognitions" versus the ability  to 
recall specific 'non-common' data for high-cognitive use.
A telephone number, for example,  could involve low or 
high levels of cognitions and different propensions
to "remember it" if it belongs to a friend or
to the local post office. 

Intense use of technology could 
lead to different effects according to the types 
of memory we consider. For example, efficient use 
of info technologies, utilizing 
intelligent data pruning strategies and various 
hardware-based memory, could free up one's 
memory from "brain clutter" and allow 
improved foci on pertinent info. 
For example, I have found myself remembering more 
data relevant to my research when I memorize them on my Palm. 

On the other hand, intense use of technology
might impair certain low-involvement memories and 
affect the way one's exposes, processes, learn 
and memorizes information. 
 I agree on previous posts about Neil Postman's work.
There are also several "historical" 
researches in Media studies showing
how the diffusion of  radio and TV has affected
the learning and memorization abilities of entire generations 
(acustic versus visual memory).

I imagine that using multiple sensorial modalities 
(visual, tactile, acustic) like certain new technologies
allow to do, might facilitate the ability to recall 
certain types of info, but could impair 
other "types" of memories. 

Moreover, specific technologies should be considered:
the intense use of technology might have a 
different impact on our memory according to the  
technology one's analyzes (Cellular, Internet, Palm, MP3, etc). 
It could also be relevant to consider
how do different "types" of memory might affect ICT 
over time

cheers,
Monica Murero




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