Volatility of Human Memory 246
prostoalex writes "Scientific Americans looks into the human brain, trying to figure out why some events just tend to stick in our memories forever, while the others are gone: "How does a gene "know" when to strengthen a synapse permanently and when to let a fleeting moment fade unrecorded? And how do the proteins encoded by the gene "know" which of thousands of synapses to strengthen? The same questions have implications for understanding fetal brain development, a time when the brain is deciding which synaptic connections to keep and which to discard. In studying that phenomenon, my lab came up with an intriguing solution to one of these mysteries of memory.""
poor /. synaptic function (Score:5, Funny)
Re:poor /. synaptic function (Score:5, Funny)
No, but this does. [lycaeum.org]
Re:OT: Re:poor /. synaptic function (Score:2)
But regardless, I thought we knew one of (if not the primary) factor involved - it's proportional to the strength of the emotion tied to the memory. Anyone?
Re:OT: Re:poor /. synaptic function (Score:2)
Those guys seem to set up their frame of reference regarding the physical substrate, the mechanics if you will, that may physically realise memory.
If you try to reduce "emotion" in the context of physical implementation, you see... what? Probably still nerves firing (mostly located in the amygdala perhaps?). So, if my hypothesis I just p
Re:OT: Re:poor /. synaptic function (Score:2, Funny)
Did I just say that out loud? Oh crap.
Re:OT: Re:poor /. synaptic function (Score:2)
1 - Genes provide a chemical instruction set for cellular operations
2 - Neurons are cells
3 - The brain is composed of neurons
4 - Informational organization exists in the brain in the form of connections between neurons
5 - Neurons form connections due to the interaction between their genes and the rest of the brain.
6 - Since the rest of the brain is composed of nothing more than more neurons, each of which is individualy controled by internal ge
Re:poor /. synaptic function (Score:2, Funny)
Maybe, but I'm sure it explains WOM - Write Only Memory.
Re:poor /. synaptic function (Score:2)
This is kinda interesting (Score:5, Interesting)
From the recently noted on slashdot Edge poll What do You believe is true even though you cannot prove it [edge.org], I remember this bit by Terrence Sejnowski [edge.org] caught my attention (I'm pasting it here cause I can't figure out how to link to that specific part of the page):
Re:This is kinda interesting (Score:5, Interesting)
Another aspect to consider is that diseases such as Alzheimers are associated with the accumulation of misfolded proteins (plaques) in the extracellular environment. Although the prevailing idea is that these plaques might be toxic or the residue of dead cells, it's not impossible to think that plaques could also "de-program" neurons by altering the normal extracellular environment.
Re:This is kinda interesting (Score:5, Interesting)
Rarely are these long term memories of the same quality as very recent memories, and I don't just mean of strength, but that they are qualitatively different. That you no longer have access to what one might call witness memory, where if someone asks you questions about the event you can search the myriad details of the event to find the answer.
Given that the bulk of our early memories are lost over time, what's special about that handful of memories that we do hold onto and that are veridical? I suspect that most of this subset of retained memories are not the original memories but rather memories of the memories.
Personally, when I go over the longest memories I still hold onto, they are almost all experiences that I at some point either told someone else about, thought about, or had cause to remember at some point in the past. Each time you do this the memory is copied to other areas (whatever those might be, we still don't have a good grasp on this). And most of a given memory that I now have owes its features to the nature of the account I gave earlier.
For example say someone remembers the experience of riding on their grandmother's lap on a train when he goes to visit her at the age of three. Shortly after that he will have all sorts of specific stored information relating to that particular event. If the event is never revisited it will likely be almost entirely lost, but if several years later he tells someone else about the experience, a memory of the event recounted still many years further down the road would depend heavily on what exactly the person shared during that earlier recounting. That is, the person is no longer remembering the event, but rather recalling the earlier recounting.
Oh if you're cued well enough you can remember all sorts of things from way back, but they are so fragmentary that it's probably just the distributed nature of memory that saves them from complete loss most of the time. There will always be a few bits and pieces floating around in there.
More recent memories unravel first (Score:4, Insightful)
More telling, visiting an elderly friend in hospital, he introduced me to the wife of the patient opposite who had stroke-related dementia. They were immigrants and he had spoken both English and another major "second" language fluently before his disability, but now can only use his birth language, which is a lonely way to exist in an English-speaking hospital.
Even my mother, who had a very slight stroke a couple of years ago, now starts many more conversations about things from her childhood than about the last third of her life in the house where she still lives reasonably independently in a community where she played a very active role for most of those years.
So I felt Sejnowski's idea sounded sensible when I first read it. However I don't see it as being inconsistent with the SciAm article linked here. To form something more permanent in the intracellular matrix around a synapse, most likely you are still going to need to start with some special protein finding its way to that particular synapse.
And we still need a credible story as to how one or several persistently strengthened synapses actually encode one of the countless details we accumulate in a life time in all their contextual detail.
Re:This is kinda interesting (Score:5, Interesting)
I wouldn't be so quick to dismiss it. Terry Sejnowski [salk.edu] is probably one of the most prominent neuroscientists alive today, and generally knows what he's talking about.
You do not need constancy of material/molecules to keep a memory - in a sense you can exchange a building brick by brick, one at a time, with new bricks, and maintain your building like new, for millenia.
This is true, and undoubtedly works well for short-term and medium-term memories. However, all of this exchange takes energy, and if there's a more energy efficient way of doing things (such as, perhaps, storing memories in the extracellular matrix), evolution would tend to select in favor of it.
Re:Yes interesting indeed! (Score:2, Interesting)
various studies in neuroscience is that "memory" and "mental activity" can not be fully distinguished from the "architecture" of the nerves themselves. Neurons are connected via synapses on dendrites and connections are being formed and reshaped (new topologies of interconnectness. Thus, as differential activity ensues, differential connectedness and synapse development occurs concomitantly. Some neuronal paths will be selected for, while others will be sele
Re:This is kinda interesting (Score:5, Insightful)
Not necessarily so. Just because process A is more energy efficient than process B does not mean that process A will be more likely selected for. Evolution is not hill climbing. In fact, evolution tends to create the opposite effect. Organisms become more complex (and usually less efficient) over time. If evolution tended to select for efficiency over other factors then entropy would be winning, not losing. Wouldn't that suck?
Re:This is kinda interesting (Score:2)
What do you mean, evolution isn't hill climbing? Yes, organisms tend to become more complex, but not at a cost in efficiency. If it isn't more efficient (at survival), it won't last. It may be more inefficient in some ways, but the efficiency with respect to survival will always tend to increase.
Re:This is kinda interesting (Score:2, Informative)
Re:This is kinda interesting (Score:2)
I am not a neuro
Re:This is kinda interesting (Score:2)
Re:This is kinda interesting (Score:2, Informative)
As an aside, doesn't the main nerve (can't remember name and too lazy to Google) that carries the impulse to the heart generate a 60Hz pulse. I remember reading that was why so many (low voltage) electrocution deaths in the US were due more to heart failure rather than tissue and burn damage.
Re:This is kinda interesting (Score:2)
Uh... sorry... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Uh... sorry... (Score:2)
distilled spirits... (Score:2)
Yeah, my lab came to the same conclusions... (Score:5, Funny)
Implications for Slashdot Editors (Score:3, Funny)
When scientists figure out how this process works, we should start a fund to genetically enhance the memories of the Slashdot editors, in order to prevent DUPES
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Re:This reminds me of... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:This reminds me of... (Score:3, Funny)
Wow! What did you type into the google engine to get back "Victor.. you are a dumbass!"?
Pain for me (Score:5, Interesting)
Now I don't remember the surgery, and I don't remember the antics I pulled at showing nurses why I was in the hospital... but I *do* remember the first time I had to goto the bathroom after surgery.
That memory is so seared into my brain I can even recall I was high enough to look out a window over the cityscape, and that there was a bricked church in the background and the window had blinds (the black slatted ones) on it.
And I remember so much so terribly much pain I don't know how I survived it.
My parents tell me that after that brief moment of screaming I was OK... and I don't remember anything else of that event save for that moment.
And just for comparison (of a little kid) I've had 18 kidney stones... I have a good memory for pain. But that memory makes me cringe and shiver every time I have it.
Re:Pain for me (Score:5, Funny)
A teacher noticed that a little boy at the back of the class was squirming around, scratching his crotch and not paying attention. She went back to find out what was going on. He was quite embarrassed and whispered that he had just recently been circumcised and he was quite itchy. The teacher told him go down to the principal's office, phone his mother, and ask her what he should do about it. He did it and he returned to the classroom, where he sat down in his seat.
Suddenly, there was a commotion at the back of the room. She went back to investigate only to find him sitting at his desk with his penis hanging out. "I thought I told you to call your mom!" she screamed. "I did," he said, "And she told me that if I could stick it out till noon, she'd come and pick me up from school
Re:Pain for me (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Pain for me (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Pain for me (Score:3, Interesting)
This is very often true of pregnancy. I've been told (being a 21 year old guy, I'll never really know) that while childbirth is painful for humans (duh), women don't tend to remember it after childbirth. This is supposedly a genetic trait becuase otherwise women wouldn't be li
Re:Pain for me (Score:3, Insightful)
Your brain, built around the need to survive, certainly does not want to forget about pain. It wants to remember pain, and more importantly what caused it.
Because if everything else about pain is working correctly, pain is a good indication that we've done or encountered something that is bad for us.
Sounds like you've been reading too many books about recovered memories. That pile of crockery has destroyed more lives than it has helped.
Re:Pain for me (Score:5, Insightful)
There is some pain that is important to remember. It's VITAL to remember. This is stuff like knives are dangerous (learn this after a cut), a stove is hot (ouch!), it hurts having people piled on you (making it hard to breath), etc. All these things are important to remember for your survival. If you forgot that putting your hand on a stove hurt, how many times would you do that during your life? This is important stuff, so this comment's parrent is right.
At the same time there are things that are painfull that need to be forgotten. Some (like childbirth, mentioned in my other comment) could be a BIG problem if they were remembered. Others (highly traumatic events, abuse, serious car wrecks when you're bleeding on the pavement, etc) could prevent you from functioning if you remembered them. These things should, must, be forgotten to live a normal life. These things are fewer, and more likely to be emotional or abuse related.
As for "recovered memories", I agree completely. They are bogus, and very dangerous. There are some good books out there about the falacy's and dangers of recovered memories.
Re:Pain for me (Score:2)
There may be special cases, such as childbirth, in which mechanisms kick in to prevent harmful memories, but I don't buy this protective mechanism for big-bads, like car accidents
I think people don't remember big-bads because their brains are swelling from the impact trauma and certain parts, such as the hippocampus, stop working well enough to encode memory. Hence, people have missing parts of their memory near the time of trauma not becau
Re:Pain for me (Score:3, Insightful)
It has been quite awhile since Freud was considered by the scientific body at large to be correct about anything.
And yes, I've heard of repression of memories. Fortunately, most of the scientific community is coming around to the opinion that they are bullshit before more innocent people have their lives ruined by self-aggrandizing memory recovery experts who brainwash people into putting their fa
Re:Pain for me (Score:3, Interesting)
I, for one, know for absolute certain that repressed memories exist. I suffered a very traumatic and gory accident when I was 13. I have vivid memories of the details right up to and right after the event, but have absolutely no memory of the moment of the accident. I know for certain that I would have seen it
Re:Pain for me (Score:3, Interesting)
By way of introduction, I am not so certain.
I suffered a very traumatic and gory accident when I was 13.
I have experienced several intense, painful and traumatic accidents.
I have vivid memories of the details right up to and right after the event, but have absolutely no memory of the moment of the accident.
Do you remember a loud noise, which seemed to drown out everything around you?
I know for certain that I would have see
Re:Pain for me (Score:2)
Re:Pain for me (Score:2)
I was underwater. No loud noise.
It is likely you would have been looking at it. You might not have felt it, as pain takes some time to set in, especially if it is extreme pain. You may not have had enough time to have felt the event as it happened (sensory overload).
I was 100% definitely looking at it, because I saw the propeller coming towards me, right up to the moment before contact. I didn't say I would have felt pain, I
Re:Pain for me (Score:2)
Even for the things Freud may be right about, he will be right about them without it being a scientific insight: his method was essentially one of introspection and aggregated self-report. That he has so much traction even today says more about his insight than about his methods. And should be considered an entertaining coincidence, rather than a real scientific t
Re:Pain for me (Score:2)
I only remember one thing before that (my parrents painting the hallway),
Re:Pain for me (Score:2)
The same goes for the 4 times I've separated my left knee, I remember each moment as if it had happened yesterday, and the rather memorable pain that it caused.
Personally I think it has something to do
Re:Pain for me (Score:2)
I was watching a Kung-Fu movie at my great grandparent's house, my cousing and I were trying to mimic the moves of the guys in the movie. Well, he did it a bit too enthusiastically and nailed me right in the balls.
I spend the next 20 minutes crying and so did he because my great grandmother spanked him. This was over 25 years ago and I remember it like it was last week. Yet, I can never remember when my GF tells me we have some function to
So if your GF kicked you in the Nuts, you'd (Score:2)
Man, you are quite the brave one putting this comment out here. What if she sees it and realizes the way to make you remember functions is to threaten (or do so) kick you in the nuts.
Brave man. We slashdotters admire your willingness to give up children...
Oops.. (Score:3, Funny)
I hate when that happens.
On another note... when I was 13 years old I was walking around the house for about 20 minutes trying to find the screw driver I just had, where the heck could it have gone, I just ... had ... it ... in ... my ... hand. It was still there and at that point I knew what lay ahead for me in life.
Re:Oops.. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Oops.. (Score:3, Funny)
20 minutes?
When I was 31 I spent a good half an hour wandering around the house trying to find my glasses. Suddenly I found them on a table, put them on, and immediately thought "great, now I can find... wait, what was I looking for?"
I spent another ten minutes looking around before I remembered what I was doing.
At that point I said "you know, I should just go back to using drugs.
Does this shed any more light on coding solutions? (Score:4, Interesting)
At last... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:At last... (Score:2, Insightful)
Catch 22 (Score:5, Insightful)
Increase the signal to noise ratio of my memory, then w're in business.
Re:Catch 22 (Score:2)
Re:Catch 22 (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Catch 22 (Score:2)
Re:Catch 22 (Score:2)
It seems that the lack of need of association results in none being created, resulting in data rather than knolage being built.
superflies (Score:5, Informative)
What this means for us humans -- if it means anything at all -- is pretty questionable. However if you want to go out on a limb here, drugs or genetic modifications to increase CREB production could make you learn things faster, without sacrificing that important relevance filter (i.e. remembering every license plate you see or whatever).
Obligatory google scholar link for more info (Score:2)
Re:superflies (Score:2)
Human memory (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Human memory (Score:2, Funny)
If you buy and smoke some marijauna, odds are that both your cache and your cookies will be either depleted or gone.
Re:Human memory (Score:2)
Pure will (Score:2)
I think the level of consciousness a moment has affects our capacity to (and interest in) remembering them. But this can be a function of pure will.
Mind you, there is no telling how many of these willed memories have been forgotte
Re:Pure will (Score:2)
This reminds me of a moment I was in some sort of philosophical conversation.
It was about the about how meaningless a moment can appear, cause most of it will go up in thin air unless you specifically remember it.
There was a plane flying overhead, and I pointed out that plane would stop to exist in our minds. I was certain the moment that by the time we'd meet up again the upcoming week, the moment would've been lost, never to be remembered again if I wouldn't have pointed out we wouldn't remember. The l
Re:Pure will (Score:2)
Over the years I have reminded myself of the scene and could look around it like looking at a photo but now unfortunately it has faded to the extent that although I remember the broad details an
Fake memories (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Fake memories (Score:2, Interesting)
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Forum/6243/imstri. html [geocities.com]
You can laugh and not believe it at all, but Image Streaming is remarkeably effective in remembering events
How the brain works... (Score:3, Informative)
How does a synapse know whether to remember something or not... answer - it doesn't. What we remember is only related to what synapses still function, so it something breaks, we don't remember that particular piece of information.
I personally think that the source of all human illness is basically the body forgetting how to maintain itself... critical synapses failing. But what would I know?
Re:How the brain works... (Score:2)
Well, that's not quite true. Some synapses are truely "unsupervised," strengthening when, for example, the two neurons it connects fire at the same time. Other synapses strengthen or weaken when exposed to certain chemicals, like calcium or dopamine.
I personally think that the source of all human illness is basically the body forgetting how to maintain itself... critical synapses failing.
This may be true for certain ne
Irony (Score:3, Funny)
Prudent Memories (Score:3, Insightful)
Yeah... ish.... but what about.... Trivia? (Score:4, Insightful)
The truth is evolution is a coarse brush. In order for something to offer a significant chance of being genetically propagated, it has to offer a sizeable benefit (25%+ if I recall my conversation with one of the world's better population modellers working for CSIRO). Less than that and it will tend to get lost in the noise.
So I'm sure that memory setup the way it has been (to forget some pains, to remember others) has been something we've grown into, but I'm also sure some element of it prevades almost every intelligent animal as well. I bet our cat has that same setup (well, there is the claim they may in fact remember nothing, but I know too well this is just propaganda...). But I wouldn't say the system was yet 'fully optimized' for being able to deal with future events.
The fact is, there probably is no fully optimized configuration, given an infinite range of possible future events. So we're probably in that fuzzy zone of mostly useful in most situations, which is right where we should be (that is to say though I disagree with the particulars of the comment, I agree with the general conclusion).
Sure, we can probably enhance memory via drugs or nanos eventually for certain things. Handy, perhaps an advantage. We may be able to help blot out trauma (a pill, for instance, for a recent victim of physical trauma so the trauma does not become the stuff of recurrent nightmare but fades from their memory over time). So these applications would have some use. But giving everyone an eidetic memory might not be either a good idea nor terribly feasible.
Re:Yeah... ish.... but what about.... Trivia? (Score:2)
Just out of curiosity, who is claiming this? Ican prove pretty well that my cat can remember something traumatic that happened only once even months later (she got a surpise shower while playing with the knobs in the bathroom, and now freaks out if you bring her anywhere near the knobs).
Re:Yeah... ish.... but what about.... Trivia? (Score:2)
Re:Yeah... ish.... but what about.... Trivia? (Score:2)
Loop
Re:Prudent Memories (Score:2)
Paradox ? It's just rubbish. Why can a creation never be smarter than it's creator, if it was created then it would need a creator or a creation process but what that is and how smart it is is totally irrelevant to the creation process.
or, 'Potential Programmability of Human Memory' (Score:4, Interesting)
A leitmotif the article turns on is the potential programmability, more than the volatility, of human memory. They discuss how the older view of our memory as volatile and mysterious has been refined, as we've discovered the mechanisms for transition between short and long term memory. From the physiological to the cellular level, the idea here is a familiar one -- we know more than ever, and we're learning faster than we had before, in this case about memory and about learning.
Most intriguing are the material implications of the article -- they find memories transitioning to long term storage when information is reinforced at specific intervals and with specific techniques. This matches some experimental evidence as referred to, like the familiar ideas of studying or preparing in the same location you will test or perform in -- but, its level of specificity begs for more experimentation and refinement of memory management techniques. Learning and memory across the whole human experience can be biologically maximized if we find just the right process -- read that slippery section in x minute increments and take 10 minute brakes between 3 repetitions. Or maybe, do asdf to remember x words by rote for the next 4 hours, and do ;lkj to sufficiently remember x for a month. Without running a cord into your ear, the article is promising for its level of detail in exact ways we might approach finding best practices for our current hardware.
I'm curious generally about how soon articles like this, especially up at the Scientific American level of exposure, translate into experiments at universities (and, self-help books?). I'm tempted to modify my own learning accordingly, n/m waiting.
BG
My wife has this figured out already (Score:2)
I have tried to explain the innermost workings of the male mind to her many times, but she just does not understand that we have a very small and flaky birthday/anniversary/shoe size database.
Re:My wife has this figured out already (Score:2)
Well...that was your second mistake...
Is there anything new here? (Score:3, Interesting)
What we don't know is where and how Long Term memories are stored. We know that they are formed through synaptic input in the limbic system. Presumably, they are then passed to somewhere in the cortex. Why? How? Where? That is what we don't know.
BTW, it is quite easy to do your own experiments on LTP. Although they can be a bit dangerous.
Re:Is there anything new here? (Score:2)
Why do they have to be stored in a localized portion of the brain? Wouldn't it be more likely that they would be stored & interconnected through large chunks of the brain, which might not be located in the exact same spaces between different people?
Do we actually lose memories? (Score:3, Insightful)
The appeal of the game Go to me is just that. When you've seen your 1000th game you don't remember all the patterns and sequences in all the previous games. You simply can't keep track of which opening moves lead to which outcomes. There are more moves in the game than molecules in a galaxy so it's silly to expect full recognition. What you do get though is how you felt about certain moves as you saw them. You learned to enjoy the quick attack at the opponent or the slow tactfulness that drew out an opponents mistakes. Read enough Go games and you'll begin to see what an experienced player is feeling as he makes his moves. You'll see it because you'll remember the feeling you got when that kind of move was made before. You won't have at hand a mental reference chart for what was a brutish invasion and what was sly trickery based on the specific pattern of the stones. Instead you'll have an approximation attached to a feeling which makes that move vaguely recognizable even though you've never seen it before.
Computers don't have the capacity for heuristics and pattern recognition that people do which is why a three month Go player can soundly beat any Go computer. People have a complex system of feelings which allow us to index and categorize all the experiences of our lives without ever having to remember those experiences explicitly. Go is deep enough that it will show you how someone's head is connected.
Chess is tricky. Go humbles me.
Usage and randomness (Score:2)
The rest is probably just random. There may be no ghost in the shell at all.
Early memory (Score:2)
I was given a matchbox car which had a trunk. Years later I recalled that I put the wrapper for a straw in the trunk. I found the car, opened it and there it was. Funny since I have limited memory from that period of time. I do remember the eye dr's office too from the visits there. There was a good show on TV for the Annenberg CPB education series. This one was on Psychology with Dr Zimbardo (Stanford), it was on memory, he covered the famous cases when som
Re:Early memory (Score:2)
Memory is very strange. It seems to me that the very act of remembering something becomes a new memory (as it has in your case). You end up with memories of memories of memories. Some of them real, some of them were just dreams that you've remembered so often you can't tell the difference unless at one point you made a point of remembering that it was a dream.
Imperfect memory? Yes, please... (Score:4, Interesting)
There are some good things about a clear memory. Being able to recall things with a minimal amount of effort, and maybe, if it's stubborn, the easy recall of where to find it. Immediate notice of a flaw in a pattern, no matter how miniscule or unnoticeable. Noticing inconsistency in a conversation. Tracking how much money you have left.
However, it does have it's downside.
Ever hear the saying "Someday we'll look back and laugh at this?"
I'm still waiting. I still cringe over every single embarassing memory in the 30-year period that is my life. Those memories, when I recall them, are much too clear, and it feels like it just happened, despite the fact that some of those events had occurred over 20-25 years ago. Sometimes it's so strong, I feel the need to shut down, and lately, it's started to cause nervous reactions; too many things are drawing them up as I work to re-integrate myself into that thing known as "Humanity."
Thankfully, my memory, while vivid, is still selective, and I can find the mercy of forgetfulness. I don't think I could survive a photographic memory with my sanity intact.
It is said that if you recalled every single thing, it would take a strong will not to go mad. I believe it.
Memory vs. Memories (Score:3, Interesting)
It's interesting to read the point of view of others. That generally is the way for us to form opinions, and, well, I have my own opinion formed.
I think it's probably not so much a matter of "strengthening" a synapse to remember more clearly. I think it's more of an associative memory thing. As we all know, remembering certain things are "triggered" by events, occurences and coincidences. Certain things could be remembered during a conversation on a certain topic, for example; haven't we all played that game where someone says how bad a fall they took from their bike when that someone was young, and then we go on to say "Well, check out the fall I took..." and then go on to tell them an even worse fall? I think it's things we see, hear, taste, smell, touch, that trigger these memories into surfacing.
Part of this is associative, and we all do it. But, some events are almost omnipresent in our minds. For example, a rape victim. The victim will remember this event on the premise that so many times she's heard about how bad that could be, how intolerable a behaviour that could be for a human, and we get it drilled in our minds. When the event actually happens to her, it will trigger all these memories of hearing how bad it is all at once.
The reverse will then happen: anytime a rape victim will see a commercial on rape prevention, or a attempted rape scene in a movie, that will in turn trigger all these times that she was told that rape is bad, and the event itself. (Keep in mind here, I'm in no way saying rape is just an "event" - I do NOT condone it. We're just not discussing the moral implications here.)
Associations are made between memories and, in turn, synapses, because of all the possible interconnections they have. Based on all the similarities or closeness of incidents in our lives, we re-associate events that happen daily to old, pushed-away-to-the-side memories. That's how when you see an old friend you haven't seen in so long can "bring back" so many great memories.. and bad ones as well.
I doubt that certain events are more powerful than others, but I think they might be more potent than some, simply by all these things we associate together.
My 2 cents!
Mental heart-beat (Score:2, Interesting)
In light of this article, perhaps the following mental discipline may be useful:
Every ten minutes, review the important experiences of the preceding ten minutes. Also review the important events of the preceding couple of ten-minute intervals.
I guess this would be like a 'mental heart-beat', that would serve to keep your mind active and your useful memories intact.
Say it Three Times (Score:2)
Witness discreditation program (Score:3, Interesting)
If in order to commit something to long term memory you need to reactivate relevant synapses after an interval measured in minutes, then the reactivation will surely be compromised by whatever rationalisation you have managed to do in the interim.
If I recall correctly, there have been controlled experiments done in which a stooge managed to readily convince witnesses that certain details of an event where quite different to what had actually happened.
My brain without me. (Score:2, Interesting)
Yesterday I had to add a line to a file.
A simple unix command that a few months ago I could have spitted out like second nature...
was gone!
I walked aimlessly through the cube-maze string at blank faces trying to remember but I couldn't.
Was that a cat command? set? awk?
I asked some gurus and referred my to the >> command. Than I sat back in front of my white board and gently and swiftly the line e
Re:GB /\ MP3 /\ Brain Power (Score:2)
You sure that's a good idea [imdb.com]?
Whoa. ;^)
Re:GB /\ MP3 /\ Brain Power (Score:2)
Re:A few memories I would like to remember... (Score:3, Funny)
That reminds of me of the first time i lied on
Re:Data storage (Score:4, Interesting)
However, there seems to be another difference...
Data on a hard drive, until the hard drive -does- begin to malfunction, is stored perfectly. That is, if I type a paragraph (or an entire book), save it, come back a year later, and reopen that file, then provided that the hard drive is functioning properly, that book will be pulled right back up, word-for-word. While the brain might remember the -idea- of the book, then chances are, if you are asked to repeat, word for word, the third paragraph on page 287, you will not be able to do so, even five minutes after reading it.
Of course, the ability to condense, interpret, and distill the important points out of information is what makes humans superior to computers. But there's something to be said for having a medium (paper and pen, computer, camera, whatever) that can store something exactly, and pull it up to refresh your memory (which likely still has the outline and highlights of important subjects, but may be missing the details) when the need be.
Also, whatever the brain may do, it doesn't always seem to work flawlessly at distinguishing important from unimportant. I have quite a few things pop into my head, at various times, some from when I was as young as 2. These things weren't really important to me even then, and sure in the hell aren't now. But they stay around. Now on the other hand, I'm sure my boss told me to do something, but I just can't remember what it might've been...
Re:Data storage (Score:2)
Re:Women memory (Score:3, Insightful)
More accurately:
Men forget but never forgive.
Women pretend to forgive but neither forgive nor forget.
Re:2 cents ... an philosophy (Score:2, Funny)