Researchers have created a font that can boost your memory

By Cara Curtis

I spent my university years sitting in countless lectures accompanied by uninspiring Powerpoint presentations. My notes were equally uninspiring, and never stayed in my memory.

It’s a problem that doesn’t just affect students. Ever caught yourself re-reading the same article twice? To make text easier to remember, Melbourne-based designers partnered with behavioral scientists at RMIT University and have designed a font that actually makes reading more difficult.

Ironically named “Sans Forgetica,” the font is more difficult to read than most typefaces – and that’s by design. The ‘desirable difficulty’ you experience when reading information formatted in Sans Forgetica prompts your brain to engage in deeper processing.

To make your brain work harder to retain information, the font is legible yet evidently broken and disconnected. Since chunks of words are removed, the brain is required to put more effort into reading, which only takes a fraction of a second — but this font seems to be working.

Memory-boosting font designed by researchers in Melbourne

recent study involving 400 university students found a small increase in memory retention when reading text in Sans Forgetica compared to Arial. The participants reading Sans Forgetica were found to remember 57 percent of the text, and only 50 percent when reading in Arial.

Although the font has promising statistics, it has limitations according to lecturer and Sans Forgetica co-creator, Stephen Banham. Speaking to the Guardian, Banham said: “God no, you wouldn’t want novels printed in it, it would probably induce a headache.”

It’s unlikely you’ll want to use it as part of your every day reading, Sans Forgetica could be a handy type-tool for stressed-out students. You can download this free font here.


 This article has been previously published on The Next Web.

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