Psychologyspeaking topic
Chunking: why do we memorize a phone number in groups of three and four instead of digit by digit? How does packaging information let the mind hold so much more?
— George Miller, the magical number seven and chunking
practice with this topic
Set the timer (5-30 min), take 20 seconds of prep if you like, start talking. Jot your thoughts onto the sticky-note board.
similar topics
- Some languages force every sentence about an event to mark whether you saw it yourself or only heard about it. A speaker can't simply say 'it rained'; they have to say 'I saw it rain' or 'it apparently rained'. If your grammar makes you flag your sources in every sentence, do you end up lying less?
- The phonological loop: how does the 'inner voice' we use to hold a phone number by repeating it actually work? Why does the number vanish the moment we stop rehearsing?
- Social loafing: why does everyone put in a little less effort when working in a group? Do we slack off once we sense our individual work is invisible in the crowd?
- Men often bond so deeply with dogs because dogs offer the affection that society rarely shows men.
- In a language with no exact number words, speakers say 'one, two, many' and cannot reliably tell six stones from seven. Counting isn't innate; it's a tool that language hands us. Are numbers a truth we discovered, or a thinking instrument humans invented?