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Tuesday, 14 March, 2000, 15:14 GMT
How to outwit the cocky cabbies
Next time you are trapped by the stream-of-consciousness ranting of a cocky cabbie, remember that when it comes to intelligence, he may have the upper hand.
Scientists have found that among London taxi drivers, the discipline of having to memorise the names of the capital's streets enlarges a section of the brain called the hippocampus.
Studying each grid of the A-Z is one solution, but for those who wish to preserve their eyesight, as well as their sanity, there are other solutions. Tony Buzan, author of two ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ books on how to improve your brain power, breaks the process down to three steps:
"When he got out of the car he did not look at it parked in the space, he did not associate it with the environment in which it was parked and he did not locate that environment in his mind." Mushy mind The three checks only take a second, says Mr Buzan, but it is training yourself to do them in the first place that's important. Too many people allow their brain to turn to mush because they don't exercise mentally, he says.
One example of "misinformation" is the practice of writing notes in just one colour of ink. "The brain remembers well by colour so if you write everything in blue ink that is monochrome. Monochrome is a visual representation of monotone, from which derives monotonous, or boring. Boredom makes the brain go to sleep." Mr Buzan, a supporter of the annual Mind Sports Olympiad which, this year, runs for nine days at London's Alexandra Palace, says memory champions tend to rely on simple techniques based around the three rules Sporting chance Other tips are to keep physically fit and practise "mind sports". "If a person is aerobically fit there is more oxygen flowing to the brain and oxygen is the lifeblood of the mind. Games such as chess, draughts, crosswords, memory puzzles get you into a discipline of thinking and they are not a chore." Dr Judy Blendis, a chartered psychologist who teaches memory courses, builds on Mr Buzan's techniques with some specific examples.
And for those still in awe of a cabbie's amazing powers of memory, bear in mind something they consistently fail to recall - the passenger can be right. |
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