veloping Winners in Sports and Life (New York: HarperCollins, 2003). The
exercise is described on page 63. This book is a must-read for anyone who
coaches kids’ sports.
159
But in the United States: The statistics in the Our Intuition Is Flawed Clinic
about various causes of death are from the 2001 Statistical Abstract of the
United States.
162
A few weeks before the NBA: The NBA rookie orientation is described in a
great article by Michelle Kaufman, “Making a Play for Players,”
Miami Her-
ald, October 5, 2003.
163
At the NFL’s orientation: See Grant Wahl and L. Jon Wertheim, “Paternity
Ward,”
Sports Illustrated, May 4, 1998, 62.
5. Emotional
165
In 2004, some researchers at Carnegie Mellon: Deborah A. Small, George
Loewenstein, and Paul Slovic, “Can Insight Breed Callousness? The Impact
of Learning About the Identifiable Victim Effect on Sympathy,” working
paper, University of Pennsylvania, 2005.
168
This chapter tackles the emotional component: This chapter focuses on
the power of emotions to make people
care, but research suggests that emo-
tional ideas are also more
memorable. Emotions increase memory for an
event’s “gist or center.” Memory researchers talk about “weapon focus”—
people who have been robbed or who have witnessed crimes often remember
the perpetrator’s gun or knife with great clarity but remember little else (Reis-
berg and Heuer, below). People remember the central emotional theme of
an event and other things that are closely related in space or causal structure.
Thus, highlighting the emotional content of an idea may be one way to focus
people on a core message. See Daniel Reisberg and Friderike Heuer, “Mem-
ory for Emotional Events” in
Memory and Emotion, ed. Daniel Reisberg and
Paula Hertel (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004).
Mark Sadoski and colleagues have found that emotional aspects of texts are
rated as more important (Sadoski, Goetz, and Kangiser, 1988) and are re-
called much better (Sadoski and Quest, 1990). Interestingly, the latter article
is among several research studies that have found that things are more emo-
tional when they are easy to visualize. Making things concrete not only helps
make them understandable, it makes them emotional and helps people care.
Mark Sadoski and Z. Quest, “Reader Recall and Long-term Recall for Jour-
nalistic Text: The Roles of Imagery, Affect, and Importance,”
Reading Re-
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