FT.com
January 10, 2014 12:15 pm
January 10, 2014 12:15 pm
By Gillian Tett
‘Ask an American to
recite a phone number, and he or she will usually do it in three ‘chunks’ –
that is how convention presents it’
In recent days, I have
been obsessively staring at telephone numbers. That is partly because I have just
moved house and am flicking through my contacts list to send out
change-of-address notes. But there is a second reason too: I have just stumbled
on a fascinating little paper written by a Princeton cognitive psychologist
called George Miller on the topic of “chunking”. And while this piece of
research is half a century old, it has a curious relevance today – particularly
in relation to those telephone numbers which are now so unthinkingly woven into
the fabric of our 21st-century lives.
If Miller is correct,
whenever we recite those digits, we unconsciously reveal the degree to which we
are hard-wired to sort information into mental boxes. And that trend has
important implications – even (or especially) though most of us never give a
moment’s thought to the shape of those numbers.
The issue revolves
around memory. Back in the early 1950s, Miller, like many psychologists and
neuroscientists, was fascinated with the question of how brains retain
information. Until that point, many scientists assumed that memory varied
according to innate ability. However, Miller believed there was a more
fundamental pattern. His research suggested that most people had a limit to how
many pieces of data, such as numbers or letters, they could memorise when
presented with a list. This usually ranged between five or nine data points but
the average was “the magic number seven”.
There was a crucial
caveat: if people learnt to group data they saw or heard into manageable chunks
– or mental clusters of information – they could remember more, since each
chunk became a data point in its own right. This worked particularly well when
the clusters were associated with established ideas, or pre-existing mental
“labels”. However, even nameless bundling helped too. “A man just beginning to
learn radiotelegraphic code hears each dit and dah as a separate chunk,” Miller
wrote, after conducting experiments among radio operators. “[But] soon he is
able to organise these sounds into letters and then he can deal with the
letters as chunks . . . [then] as words,
which are still larger chunks, and [then] he begins to hear whole phrases.” Better still, over
time the amount of data stored in each chunk expanded. “It is a little dramatic
to watch a person get 40 binary digits in a row and then repeat them back
without error. . . . [However,] recoding is an extremely powerful weapon for increasing
the amount of information that we can deal with.”
Unsurprisingly, this
chunking idea has spawned a plethora of academic debate in the past five
decades. Some psychologists think the more natural number for chunking is four,
not seven; others insist that chunking explains only a small part of how our
memories work. But either way, Miller’s point – and legacy – live on in our
numbers.
. . .
Most notably, if you
ask an American to recite a phone number today, he or she will usually do it in
three chunks, since that is how convention presents it. This is partly due to
regional codes but it is also the pattern that seems to best suit our habits
(and as companies such as AT&T were influenced by Miller, this is no
accident). In London, people also quote numbers in three chunks. Elsewhere,
there are different patterns, such as two chunks of five digits (in rural
Britain) or several pairs (in France). Regardless, the key point is this:
almost no one remembers numbers in a single string of unbroken digits. This
feels unnatural.
Is this a good thing?
In some senses, yes – chunking means we can remember more numbers, and much
else. But I cannot help but wonder if there is not a darker side to this
instinct too. By keeping things in mental boxes, our brains can also become
dangerously rigid. To understand this, try quoting a telephone number you know
off by heart in different chunks (say, a three-chunk New York number as two
chunks of five digits). It is surprisingly hard.
While that rigidity –
or habit – might seem just a curiosity in relation to phone numbers, it also
extends to other mental processes. We are trained to keep all manner of data in
mental boxes, in a way that often makes us prone to dangerous blind spots or
prevents us from embracing lateral thought. Perhaps that is inevitable: we need
order to live and survive. But the next time you pick up a phone, it is worth
reflecting for a second on the way that we process and categorise data into
chunks. If for no other reason than because “thinking out of the box”, as
consultants say, can only occur when we remember the degree to which our mental
processes are shaped by mental boxes, or chunks – especially when we do not
notice those patterns at all.
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