In several experiments, researchers R. Brooke
Lea of Macalester College, David N. Rapp of Northwestern University,
Andrew Elfenbein and Russell Swinburne Romine of University of
Minnesota and Aaron D. Mitchel of the Pennsylvania State University had
participants read works of poetry and prose with alliterative sentences
to show the importance of repetitive consonants on memory.
Previous
studies have shown that alliteration can act as a better tool for
improving memory than both imagery and meaning, however the reason for this has
never been established. In their experiments the researchers hoped to
demonstrate that alliterations retrieve similar sounding words and
phrases from a person's memory, making it a useful tool for poetry
comprehension and memorization.
In one experiment, a group of
participants read aloud poems with similar alliterative sounds
throughout it while other participants had to read aloud poems with
either different alliterative sounds or no alliterations at all. A
second experiment had the same conditions, except that participants
read a series of poems silently. The final experiment had participants
read a work of narrative prose, also with the same conditions in
regards to alliterative sounds in the literature. In each experiment,
participants had to recall both content and thematic aspects from the
works that they read.
The results of all three experiments
underscore the interaction between alliteration and memory. In each of
the experiments, participants in the same-alliteration condition were
able to recall the most from the literature they read.
"In our
experiments, concepts presented early in a poem (or prose passage) were
more available when alliterative sounds overlapped between lines than
when there was no overlap," the researchers reported.
Additionally, the results of the other experiments, published in the July issue of Psychological Science,
a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, show that
alliteration's affect on memory is not lessened by either the type of
work it is used in or whether or not the literature is read silently or
aloud. Most importantly, the results demonstrate alliteration only
works as a tool to improve memory when the alliterative sounds are similar;
while the participants in the same-alliteration condition did well in
each experiment, those in the other two conditions had similar, less
impressive results.
Source: EurekAlert (Press Release)
Thursday, 31 July 2008 11:19
Improving Memory - Alliteration Affects Ability
From nursery rhymes to Shakespearian sonnets, alliterations have
always been an important aspect of poetry whether as an interesting
aesthetic touch or just as something fun to read. But a recent study
suggests that this literary technique is useful not only for poetry but
also for improving memory.
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