A 2010 research paper published in the Journal of Experimental - TopicsExpress



          

A 2010 research paper published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology found that when people who studied lists of words and read half the words out loud and the other half silently, they remembered the words spoken out loud much better. Called “the production effect,” hearing the words out loud made them more distinct than the words read silently. When reading something you want to remember, try reading the most important information aloud — even a whisper should work, according to the researchers.
Posted on: Mon, 19 Aug 2013 20:53:06 +0000

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