Cognitive Broadband: When Visual Information Enhances Cognition

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It would be no surprise to the Max Wertheimer and the other Gestalt psychologists that visual displays can deliver complex information so effectively.  I think of it as “cognitive broadband.” Journalist LaToya Egwuekwe created a progressive data display of Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) unemployment numbers that delivers a powerful message. (See “The Decline: The Geography of a Recession,”)  So powerful, in fact that it went viral from YouTube to CNN.  (The orginal site has  more impact than the YouTube version embedded below.)

Beyond the implications of the unemployment numbers, however staggering and moving, there is an underlying and very important message about education in the 21st Century.  I’m on board with all the STEM initiatives (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) but the missing ingredient in this push is synthesis.  As people either celebrate or lament, we have no shortage of data.  Finding out stuff is no longer a scarce resource.  Making sense of it all is.  The ability to think visually and spatially–not just linearly–is essential to understanding a world where facts are more plentiful than problems and where innovation is necessary for solutions and creating growth.  We are conditioned to accepting the process of education as the successful accumulation of facts.  Facts by themselves have no meaning until they are synthesized into a narrative. When was the last time a  BLS numbers release made it to YouTube?

About Dr. Pamela Rutledge

Pamela Rutledge is a consultant, author, researcher, and the Director of the Media Psychology Research Center. Her area of expertise is positive and cognitive psychology applied to emerging technologies and the use and impact of social media, narrative, and transmedia storytelling on branding, messaging, and consumer behavior. She is Adjunct Faculty at the Massachusetts School of Professional Psychology and Fielding Graduate University and an instructor of Media Psychology, Social Media and Transmedia Storytelling at UCLA Extension and UC Irvine Extension. Pam is also on the advisory board for UC Irvine Extension Business School's certificate program in Internet and Social Media Marketing. Pam develops workshops and presentations to teach Transmedia Storytelling for Marketing and Branding for both for-profit and not-for-profit organizations..

Comments

  1. Anne Kimber says:

    Wow, this was really affecting. I watched it three times, and the impact grew on viewing it repeatedly.

    I think you made your point!

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