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Personal Improvement

What we can’t see can help us find things

If you’re going to take a memory-jogging hot tip from anyone, it should be the folks at Johns Hopkins University. Recently, Jason Fischer, PhD, a cognitive neuroscientist in the university’s department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, found something strange: When we’re on the hunt for something misplaced, remembering the actual texture of the object can be more helpful in uncovering it than recalling its visual attributes. 

The study reached this conclusion by asking participants to identify items in a sea of clutter. Those who looked for a given object by remembering tactile traits—like hardness or softness—won at the impromptu game of I Spy about 20 percent faster than their counterparts who focused only on visual traits like color and shape. “What makes the finding particularly striking from a vision science standpoint is that simply knowing the latent physical properties of objects is enough to help guide your attention to them,” Dr. Fischer tells Medical Xpress. “It’s surprising because nearly all prior research in this area has focused on a host of visual properties that can facilitate search, but we find that what you know about objects can be as important as what you actually see.”

That means that if you’re trying to find your trusty running headphones, you might just find that imagining their polished, glossy texture guides your way to finding them stuffed behind a couch cushion or… still in your ears. Lost your keys? Think: What do they feel like? and you may just have a eureka moment that cuts through your COVID-19-induced brain fog and delivers your possessions back to you.

@MedicalXpress