Page 183 - Use Your Memory
P. 183

13  Long Number
 Memory  System






 The long number memory test on page 18 will probably have been
 particularly  difficult  (most people,  in IQ. tests,  cannot remember
 numbers more than 7 or 8 digits in length).  Given a long number
 such as 95862190377 to memorise, most people will try a variety
 of responses including:  to repeat the build-up continually as the
 number is presented,  eventually getting bogged down in the very
 repetition  itself;  to  subdivide  the  number  into  two-  or  three-
 number groups,  eventually losing both  the  order  and  content of
 these;  to  work  out  mathematical  relationships  between  the
 numbers  as  they  are  presented,  inevitably  'losing  track';  or  to
 'picture' the number as it is presented, the picture becoming more
 and more blurred as the  long number is presented.
 If you  think  back  to your  own  performance  in  the  initial  long
 number  memory  test,  you  will  probably  realise  that  your  own
 approach was either one or a combination of those approaches just
 mentioned.  Once  again,  the  Major  System  comes to the  rescue,
 making the  task  of memorising  long numbers  not  only  easy  but
 enjoyable.  Instead of using the Major System as a peg system  for
 remembering lists  of 100 or  1000,  etc., you take  advantage  of its
 flexibility:  going  back  to  the  basic  code,  and  to  the  Basic  Key
 Image Words you constructed for the numbers from 1 to 100, you
 use the Key Image Words in conjunction with the Link System to
 remember long numbers.
 For example, take the number at the beginning of this chapter,
 95862190377.  It  is  composed,  in  sequence,  of  the  following
 smaller numbers,  each  followed  by its  Major  System  Key Image
 Word:
 95—Ball
 86—Fish
 21—Net
 90—Base
 37—Mac
 7—Key
 108
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