The
Roman Room System
Remembering
Grouped Information
The
Roman Room technique, also
known as the Method of Loci,
is an ancient and effective
way of remembering
information where its
structure is not important.
As an example, it serves as
the basis of one of the
powerful mnemonic systems
used to learn languages.
How
to Use the Tool:
To use
the technique, imagine a
room that you know, such as
your sitting room, bedroom,
office or classroom. Within
the room are objects.
Associate images
representing the information
you want to remember with
the objects in the room. To
recall information, simply
take a tour around the room
in your mind, visualizing
the known objects and their
associated images. |
The technique
can be expanded by going into more
detail, and keying information to be
remembered to smaller objects.
Alternatively you can open doors
from your room into other rooms and
use the objects in them as well. As
you need them, you can build
extensions to your rooms in your
imagination, and fill them with
objects that would logically be
there.
You can use
other rooms to store other
categories of information.
There is no need
to restrict this information to
rooms: you could use a landscape or
a town you know well, and populate
it with memory images.
The Roman Room technique is just
one way of representing your
cognitive map of the information in
an easily accessible way.
See the introduction to this
chapter for information on how to
enhance the images used for this
technique.
Example:
For example, I can use my sitting
room as a basis for the technique.
In this room I have the following
objects:
table, lamp, sofa, large
bookcase, small bookcase, CD rack,
tape racks, stereo system,
telephone, television, video, chair,
mirror, black & white photographs,
etc.
|
I may
want to remember a list of
World War I war poets:
Rupert Brooke, G.K.
Chesterton, Walter de la
Mare, Robert Graves, Rudyard
Kipling, Wilfred Owen,
Siegfried Sassoon, W.B.
Yates
I could
visualize walking through my
front door. Within this
image, someone has painted a
picture on it showing a
scene from the Battle of the
Somme. In the center of the
picture is a man sitting in
a trench writing in a dirty
exercise book.
I walk
into the sitting room, and
look at the table. On the
top is RUPERT the Bear
sitting in a small BROOK (we
do not need to worry about
where the water goes in our
imagination!) This codes for
Rupert Brooke. |
Someone seems to
have done some moving: a CHEST has
been left on the sofa. Some jeans
(Alphabet System: G=Jeans) are
hanging out of one drawer, and some
cake has been left on the top
(K=Cake). This codes for G K
Chesterton.
The lamp has a small statuette of
a brick WALL over which a female
horse (MARE) is about to jumping.
This codes for Walter de la Mare.
Key
points:
The Roman Room technique is
similar to the Journey method. It
works by pegging images coding for
information to known things, in this
case to objects in a room.
The Roman Room technique is most
effective for storing lists of
unlinked information, while the
journey method is better for storing
lists of ordered items. |