10 Amazing Facts About Your Memory

The human memory system is a vast, ever-changing web that reacts to every new experience. Most experiences are too fleeting to leave a noticeable trace on the web, but some alter the shape of the network so that they live on as enduring memories.

  1. RECALLING THE CONTEXT OF AN EVENT IS ALMOST AS EFFECTIVE IN TRIGGERING A MEMORY AS RETURNING TO WHERE THE EVENT OCCURRED: Putting people back in the place where they experienced an event can help them to remember it – but surprisingly, just asking them to recall the surroundings can be almost as helpful.
  2. IT CAN TAKE UP TO TWO YEARS FOR A MEMORY TO BECOME PERMANENT: Experiences that are being processed for storage as long-term memories may be replayed in the mind for up to two years. Once a memory is consolidated in this way, it has the potential to last a lifetime.
  3. THE BRAIN HAS A SPECIAL AREA FOR PROCESSING HUMAN FACES: Faces are important to a social species such as humans, and the brain has evolved to process them quickly. A special area in the cortex extracts detailed information, giving fast knowledge of whom the face belongs to and its expression.
  4. ACTIONS, AS WELL AS THOUGHTS, CAN BE INVOLVED IN MEMORISING: Learning is faster if the body as well as the mind is engaged in the task. For example, it is easier to remember the layout of a town by walking the streets than by learning it from a map.
  5. MEMORY MAY BEGIN AT BIRTH – BUT OUR EARLIEST MEMORIES CANNOT BE REACHED: The brain’s primitive emotional center, the amygdala, is fully functional at birth and may be involved in the storage of early memories – but these cannot be accessed at will.
  6. EXCITEMENT ENHANCES MEMORY FORMATION, WHILE DEPRESSION INHIBITS IT: Laying down memories depends on physical processes that are influenced by certain chemical messengers in the brain, which ebb and flow according to mood. The higher the emotional state when a new experience occurs, the more likely we are to remember the experience.
  7. WHEN WE FIRST VIEW A SCENE OR SITUATION, WE RELY ON MEMORY TO HELP US MAKE SENSE OF IT: The eyes see only a tiny part of any visual scene clearly. The eyes dart around, taking in more and more information, and memory enables us to assemble this sequence of fragments into a scene.
  8. THE BRAIN HAS A BUILT-IN ‘LIE DETECTOR’ THAT SHOWS UP FALSE MEMORIES: In everyday life, a person cannot always tell if a recollection is genuine, But brain scans show that an area at the front of the brain tends to be more active when a person accesses a genuine memory than when something that may not have occurred is ‘recalled. ‘
  9. SOME OF OUR MOST EMOTIONAL MEMORIES ARE TRIGGERED BY SCENT: The olfactory system, which processes smells, has direct lines to a part of the brain called the amygdala – the seat of our emotions. This may be why unusual scents from the past have such power to evoke vivid personal memories.
  10. MANY OF THE MEMORY METHODS IN USE TODAY WERE FIRST DISCOVERED MORE THAN 2000 YEARS AGO: The ancient Greeks had a clear understanding of the way natural memory could be improved upon. They developed techniques to aid the recall of epic stories and speeches that were delivered entirely.
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