Law in Contemporary Society

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Are We Losing Our Minds? : Studying Memory

-- By AnneFox - 28 Apr 2012

The first emotion I remember feeling in life was fear. The aching sound of the piano strings as my mother’s fingers floated from chord to chord while I lazed on the sofa. That was the moment when I realized exactly what death meant—that someday when I drifted off to sleep, as I was at that instant, I would not wake. More than seventeen years later I still recoil when I hear Layla's piano coda.

Ask me to restate Justice O’Connor’s concurrence in Lawrence v. Texas and my description will not be so vivid, even though I just read over the case this afternoon. It’s easy for us to focus on not only fear, but emotions in general. We’re easily compelled by episodic memory (life events) as well, though much less so by semantic memory (general knowledge). I’ve found this issue of memory and recollection especially problematic in law school where I’m expected to jam my brain full of text every day for four months and then spew it all out in a three hour exam at term’s end. The problem appears to be twofold (at the least)—a combination of lack of focus and an over-reliance on technology, and the solution might just end up being easier than my Con Law exam.

Focus Versus Distraction

Psychologists assert that memory skill is not directly affected by how much information we pump into ourselves, but rather that “the more things we have to remember that are similar to other things, the harder it is to focus on a single item.” This is certainly true in law school where every case can be distilled into facts, issue and holding. The key, perhaps, is to focus not just on what the case says or how it compares to other cases, but how you can relate it to something else you know—something that you might find more emotionally interesting.

Many people not only find it hard to focus on specifics and commit them to memory, but even to focus at all. It’s all too easy to zone out while reading, and some psychologists have devoted their entire lives to the “wandering mind” theory, where the trick is to train oneself to practice focusing by adding information to the brain in “smaller bundles” and taking the time to meditate on the distracting thoughts separately. It sounds easy—if my anxiety about my daily budget shrinking from $11 to $6 dollars is drawing my mind away from a Regulatory Takings reading, then I should just stop and plan my budget instead of fake-reading twenty pages.

Unfortunately, in today’s world, interruptions don’t only come from one’s own mind or the people in the room, but from laptops and cell phones. Studies show that students who work on several tasks simultaneously (like checking Facebook, answering texts and studying) retain far less information and do poorly in their studies. Even without an email notification or a phone beep, many modern people still constantly think about their online presence or text conversations. While I think this is a huge identity problem in it’s own right, it also has a detrimental effect on learning. Being able to completely disconnect is a virtue in being able to concentrate.

The Google Effect

Another way that technology influences our recollection abilities is through what certain psychologists term the "Google Effect." I appreciate the Internet as much as the next twenty two year old—as much as the next academic in general. It offers an infinite wealth of information at my fingertips whenever I need and has truly revolutionized the world. Unfortunately, the Internet has also completely altered the way people process information. A group of psychologists, headed by Columbia’s Betsy Sparrow, compares the individual/Internet relationship with transactive memory (“a combination of memory stores held directly by individuals”). Basically, just as we’ve known how to garner information from parents, professors or co-workers, we now turn more often to search engines. We no longer store as much direct information on our own "hard drives" (our brains), but rather we replace it with indirect knowledge of where to find the facts on the computer.

This is unsettling. I am not a robot. I would like to be able to survive someday if I were lost in the woods without a computer or an iPhone. It seems easy to place the blame on technology for people’s “stupidity.” But alas, since I am not a robot and I am not in fact controlled by the Internet, I have to recognize that I command my own knowledge and my own memory—for the most part at least.

Why Does Our Memory Matter?

As students, we learn mostly by reading and attending lectures, so whatever our memories take away is the material from which we form knowledge about a particular subject. As lawyers, we’ll learn from researching and from sapping the transactive memory of our colleagues.

If the greatest strength of a lawyer is creativity, then the second greatest strength is recollection. The more raw material we have to work with, the more pieces-parts we have to build our arguments in our imaginations. And certainly we can find all kinds of information on Westlaw or Google, but we’re more likely to understand what we’ve already retained. Moreover, law is about more than doctrine—it’s about human behavior, so perhaps our minds, if focused, are more tailored to the task anyhow.

910 Words

PS I would like to continue to edit



Revision 1r1 - 28 Apr 2012 - 06:09:03 - AnneFox
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