Modern Wisdom: #592 – Richard Shotton – 8 Fascinating Psychological Biases | Free Podcast Summary

Modern Wisdom Podcast with Chris Williamson – Richard Shotton: 8 Fascinating Psychological Biases As an expert in the world of models, psychology, consumer behavior, and principles for advertising and social change, Richard Shotton (@rshotton) knows just how…

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Concrete facts are better remembered

  • Canadian psychologist Ian Begg conducted a study in 1972 at the University of Western Ontario
  • Begg recruited 25 students and read out a list of 22-word phrases, consisting of 50 concrete phrases (e.g., “Square door” or “white horse”) and 50 abstract phrases (e.g., “subtle truth” or “basic fact”)
  • After reading through the lists of words, the students were asked to recall as much as they could
  • Begg found that the students remembered 36 of the concrete words (72%) and only 9% of the abstract words, a massive four-fold change in memorability
  • Begg’s explanation for this finding is that vision is the most powerful of our senses and concrete words are more easily picturable, memorable, and sticky in our minds, while abstract words are forgettable

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