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Gabriel Radvansky,
University of Notre Dame: Walking through doorways causes forgetting
November 23, 2011
We’ve all experienced it: The frustration of entering a room and
forgetting what we were going to do. Or get. Or find.
Gabriel
Radvansky, University of Notre Dame
New research from University of Notre Dame Psychology Professor Gabriel
Radvansky suggests that passing through doorways is the cause of these
memory lapses.
“Entering or exiting through a doorway serves as an ‘event boundary’ in
the mind, which separates episodes of activity and files them away,”
Radvansky explains.
“Recalling the decision or activity that was made in a different room is
difficult because it has been compartmentalized.”
The study was published recently in the Quarterly Journal of
Experimental Psychology.
Conducting three experiments in both real and virtual environments,
Radvansky’s subjects – all college students – performed memory tasks
while crossing a room and while exiting a doorway.
In the first experiment, subjects used a virtual environment and moved
from one room to another, selecting an object on a table and exchanging
it for an object at a different table. They did the same thing while
simply moving across a room but not crossing through a doorway.
Radvansky found that the subjects forgot more after walking through a
doorway compared to moving the same distance across a room, suggesting
that the doorway or “event boundary” impedes one’s ability to retrieve
thoughts or decisions made in a different room.
The
second experiment in a real-world setting required subjects to conceal
in boxes the objects chosen from the table and move either across a room
or travel the same distance and walk through a doorway. The results in
the real-world environment replicated those in the virtual world:
walking through a doorway diminished subjects’ memories.
The final experiment was designed to test whether doorways actually
served as event boundaries or if one’s ability to remember is linked to
the environment in which a decision – in this case, the selection of an
object – was created. Previous research has shown that environmental
factors affect memory and that information learned in one environment is
retrieved better when the retrieval occurs in the same context. Subjects
in this leg of the study passed through several doorways, leading back
to the room in which they started. The results showed no improvements in
memory, suggesting that the act of passing through a doorway serves as a
way the mind files away memories. |