Ga onbeperkt met Magzter GOLD

Ga onbeperkt met Magzter GOLD

Krijg onbeperkte toegang tot meer dan 9000 tijdschriften, kranten en Premium-verhalen voor slechts

$149.99
 
$74.99/Jaar

Poging GOUD - Vrij

Can't recall a person's name? You are not alone

Mint Hyderabad

|

May 31, 2025

With smartphones at our fingertips, we are increasingly relying on technology to remember things for us—even people's names

- Shephali Bhatt

artik Parija prides himself on his elephantine memory, yet lately, names have begun to slip away. "I've had moments when I reconnect with someone from the pre-internet days, vividly recall our shared history but momentarily blank on their name," says the 49-year-old entrepreneur from Bengaluru. He recalls awkwardly steering such conversations without naming the person, while his mind scrambles to retrieve that "fundamental piece of personal connection." This lapse has emerged only in the past three years, he says. "It feels profoundly strange, like the fuzzy confusion after pulling an all-nighter before an exam."

Don't chalk it up to age. Screenwriter Shoaib Zulfi Nazeer has noticed this since his mid-20s. "Back in school and college, everyone was a peer, and you heard names so often that remembering them was easy. After I moved to Mumbai in 2018 and started approaching people online for networking, I realised I struggled with remembering names," says the 32-year-old from Roorkee. Nazeer has co-written dialogues for movies like Three of Us (2022) and Superboys of Malegaon (2024).

The common thread in their experience of forgetting names is the influx of digital communication. Both describe how the flood of information has fragmented attention so much that even after regular, sometimes deep, conversations with people, they find it hard to fully register or retain that primary detail about a person: their name.

As communication shifts from verbal to textual in the digital age, we interact with far more people at once. But the cues have changed: instead of calling a name out loud, we open chatboxes after seeing someone's content in a feed, type a few letters before their name auto-fills in a messaging app, or scroll to their chat in the inbox and ping them directly. The act of saying or mentally repeating a name has diminished, perhaps explaining why names slip from memory mid-conversation.

MEER VERHALEN VAN Mint Hyderabad

Mint Hyderabad

Vienna’s wine culture is organic and biodynamic

Austria's capital stakes claim as being the only city in the world with a wine-growing region within the city

time to read

4 mins

November 22, 2025

Mint Hyderabad

Mint Hyderabad

Groww’s CEO sees long growth runway

Fintech platform and broking firm Groww has just started its journey and has “not even covered 1% of our journey” even though it has completed nine years of existence, co-founder and chief executive officer Lalit Keshre in his first-ever letter to shareholders.

time to read

2 mins

November 22, 2025

Mint Hyderabad

Mint Hyderabad

THE AGE OF MT

In the 1990s and 2000s, MTV changed Indian pop forever through innovative programming and VJs who gained their own fandom. When did it stop experimenting?

time to read

7 mins

November 22, 2025

Mint Hyderabad

Global giants press for PLIs on aerospace components

Airbus, Boeing, Pratt & Whitney seek production-linked incentives like the one for drones

time to read

3 mins

November 22, 2025

Mint Hyderabad

Mint Hyderabad

Market indices may sport Reits as Sebi eyes liquidity boost

Units of real estate investment trusts (Reits) may soon be counted as equity and join India's stock market indices, as the regulator works to attract larger participation from institutions and improve liquidity in these instruments.

time to read

1 min

November 22, 2025

Mint Hyderabad

Mint Hyderabad

Rising stars of mixed-doubles table tennis

Diya Chitale and Manush Shah are the first Indians to qualify for the WTT Finals

time to read

4 mins

November 22, 2025

Mint Hyderabad

Mint Hyderabad

How Indian archers hit the bull's-eye

India's recurve archers set a roadmap for future by ending South Korea's reign at the Asian Archery Championships

time to read

5 mins

November 22, 2025

Mint Hyderabad

Why selling out has become normalised

The indie scene was once built on a siege mentality. But when film music has overtaken everything, does holding out for principles hold any meaning?

time to read

6 mins

November 22, 2025

Mint Hyderabad

It's a new day for labour

Four consolidated codes advance equal pay for women, gig worker protection, gratuity after a year, health checks

time to read

2 mins

November 22, 2025

Mint Hyderabad

Mint Hyderabad

Road trippin' through the Deep South in the US

A road trip through Louisiana, Alabama and Tennessee reveals the weight of civil rights history and its contradictions in small-town America

time to read

4 mins

November 22, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size