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3 simple steps to fight 'the Google effect' and improve your memory recall

Over the past five years, I estimate I've made the same lemon bar recipe dozens of times, if not more.

While the steps are second nature, I'm hopeless at remembering any of the measurements. When I recently found myself once again typing "Sally's Baking Addiction lemon bars" into my browser I wondered, "Is my brain turning to mush?"

It turns out my inability to retain some information is likely due a cognitive bias known as the "Google effect," or digital amnesia: the tendency for the brain to forget information that can be easily accessed online. It can weaken your memory, says Cynthia Borja, a project leader at The Decision Lab, a think tank where researchers study how people make decisions.

"One of the things we know about the brain and memory is that 'use it or lose it' absolutely applies," she tells CNBC Make It. "If you tend to always rely on Google to remember a particular fact, for example, and don't 'use' your brain to remember it, your brain gets very good at not remembering it."

In order not need to rely on the search box so often, Borja says it's worth it to spend a little more time and energy committing information to memory.

Here are three simple steps you can take to wean yourself of Google and improve your recall.

Just because you can't immediately recall something doesn't mean you'll never recall it. Before Googling a question you know you've searched before, Borja recommends taking a few minutes to try to remember the answer.

"Even if this doesn't work at first, and you end up having to Google it anyway, you will slowly strengthen your memory pathways and improve your recall," she says.

If you find information online that you know you'll want to remember later, write it down. Taking notes by hand "tends to help

Read more on cnbc.com