Remembering rhythm and rhyme: memorability of narratives for science communication

<p>Once upon a time, narratives were considered to be a non-reliable way of representing and communicating science. Nowadays, narratives are widely accepted as an accurate way of conveying science; they represent an effective emotional trigger, a lasting memory structure and a powerful aid for...

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Main Author: A. Negrete
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2021-01-01
Series:Geoscience Communication
Online Access:https://gc.copernicus.org/articles/4/1/2021/gc-4-1-2021.pdf
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spelling doaj-b7ed254e6028453893a02bb78f0dd0842021-01-18T06:29:12ZengCopernicus PublicationsGeoscience Communication2569-71022569-71102021-01-0141910.5194/gc-4-1-2021Remembering rhythm and rhyme: memorability of narratives for science communicationA. Negrete<p>Once upon a time, narratives were considered to be a non-reliable way of representing and communicating science. Nowadays, narratives are widely accepted as an accurate way of conveying science; they represent an effective emotional trigger, a lasting memory structure and a powerful aid for learning. To study how memorable different ways of presenting information can be is a fundamental task for science communication in order to evaluate materials that not only need to be understood by the general public but also need to be retained in the long term as a part of the communication process. In this paper, I will give a brief introduction to cognitive psychology and the study of memory in relation to narratives.</p> <p>Evidence from the field of memory studies suggests that narratives represent a good recall device. They can generate emotion, and this in turn is a way of focusing attention, promoting rehearsal in memory and inducing long-term potentiation. Similarly, a story produces semantic links that might assist in storing and retrieving information from memory. Studies suggest that memory span and paired-associate recall have implications in storing and recalling narratives. Evidence also suggests that the use of stories as modelling tools can organise information, provide schemas and allow extrapolation or prediction. Finally, literature in memory suggests that narratives have value as mnemonic devices.</p>https://gc.copernicus.org/articles/4/1/2021/gc-4-1-2021.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author A. Negrete
spellingShingle A. Negrete
Remembering rhythm and rhyme: memorability of narratives for science communication
Geoscience Communication
author_facet A. Negrete
author_sort A. Negrete
title Remembering rhythm and rhyme: memorability of narratives for science communication
title_short Remembering rhythm and rhyme: memorability of narratives for science communication
title_full Remembering rhythm and rhyme: memorability of narratives for science communication
title_fullStr Remembering rhythm and rhyme: memorability of narratives for science communication
title_full_unstemmed Remembering rhythm and rhyme: memorability of narratives for science communication
title_sort remembering rhythm and rhyme: memorability of narratives for science communication
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Geoscience Communication
issn 2569-7102
2569-7110
publishDate 2021-01-01
description <p>Once upon a time, narratives were considered to be a non-reliable way of representing and communicating science. Nowadays, narratives are widely accepted as an accurate way of conveying science; they represent an effective emotional trigger, a lasting memory structure and a powerful aid for learning. To study how memorable different ways of presenting information can be is a fundamental task for science communication in order to evaluate materials that not only need to be understood by the general public but also need to be retained in the long term as a part of the communication process. In this paper, I will give a brief introduction to cognitive psychology and the study of memory in relation to narratives.</p> <p>Evidence from the field of memory studies suggests that narratives represent a good recall device. They can generate emotion, and this in turn is a way of focusing attention, promoting rehearsal in memory and inducing long-term potentiation. Similarly, a story produces semantic links that might assist in storing and retrieving information from memory. Studies suggest that memory span and paired-associate recall have implications in storing and recalling narratives. Evidence also suggests that the use of stories as modelling tools can organise information, provide schemas and allow extrapolation or prediction. Finally, literature in memory suggests that narratives have value as mnemonic devices.</p>
url https://gc.copernicus.org/articles/4/1/2021/gc-4-1-2021.pdf
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