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The Science of Memory - Research Summary


A PERFECT MEMORY? Jill Price has a near-perfect memory. Give her any date, and she can typically recall what the weather was like, personal details of her life and what happened in the news. Price was the first person in the world diagnosed with hyperthymestic syndrome -- the continuous, automatic, and autobiographical recall of every day of one's life. Price's memory became near-perfect in 1980 when she was 14 years old. She says her memories are like scenes from home movies. They are constantly playing in her head, flashing forward and backward. The emotion of her memories is extremely vivid. It's as though Price relives the events with every memory. "I think, for me, I just go like 10 feet deeper," Price explained to Ivanhoe. "Because when I hear a song, not only do I go automatically to that moment in time, but I can kind of pretty much pinpoint the moment in time also. If I hear a song that is from a time that gives me the willies, I don't want to hear it. I have to get up and walk away. It affects me that much because it will literally bring me back to that moment in time." Although doctors were able to identify areas of Price's brain that are larger than normal, they still don't have concrete answers for why Price's memory is so extraordinary.

THE MYSTERIES BEHIND OUR MEMORIES: For all that scientists know about how the brain processes memories, there is still so much that they do not know. "The brain is the most complicated mechanism in the known universe," James McGaugh, Ph.D., a neuroscientist from the University of California, Irvine, told Ivanhoe. McGaugh says that memory is one of the most important functions of the brain. "If you don't have mebmory, you don't have anything else," McGaugh said. "You don't care if you have heart disease or cancer, or a sore foot if you don't have memory. Memory is the key to it all."

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THE SCIENCE OF MEMORY: Memories are processed and formed in different areas of the brain. "If you look at a visual scene, the memory of that visual scene is being processed by the visual cortex, but if you're talking about it at the same time, that memory is going to be processed in the auditory cortex, and if you're emotional about it, that's going to engage another region of the brain," McGaugh explained to Ivanhoe. McGaugh also says memories happen when the information is repeated and rehearsed and when we experience an "emotional arousal." That means we remember things better when we become emotionally "excited" about them. "Another reason that the memories can be strong is because of associated connections," Dr. McGaugh explained. "If I should ask you to remember a list of items, and they all happen to be fruits, that's a lot easier than if I give you a lot of items, and one of them is a hammer, and the other is a pear, and the other is an automobile."

For More Information, Contact:

Christopher S. Rex, Ph.D.

University of California, Irvine

Irvine, CA

(949) 824-4251

crex@uci.edu

 

This article was reported by Ivanhoe.com, who offers Medical Alerts by e-mail every day of the week. To subscribe, go to: http://www.ivanhoe.com/newsalert/.




Last updated 11/3/2009

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