*A New York Times bestseller* 'Using her expertise as a neuroscientist and her gifts as a storyteller, Lisa Genova explains the nuances of human memory' - Steven Pinker, Johnstone Professor of Psychology, Harvard University, and bestselling author of How The Mind Works 'No one writes more brilliantly about the connections between the brain, the mind, and the heart. Remember is a beautiful, fascinating, and important book about the mysteries of human memory - what it is, how it works, and what happens when it is stolen from us. A scientific and literary treat that you will not soon forget.' - Daniel Gilbert ( New York Times bestselling author of Stumbling on Happiness ) Have you ever felt a crushing wave of panic when you can't for the life of you remember the name of that actor in the movie you saw last week, or you walk into a room only to forget why you went there in the first place? If you're over forty, you're probably not laughing. You might even be worried that these lapses in memory could be an early sign of Alzheimer's or dementia. In reality, for the vast majority of us, these examples of forgetting are completely normal. Why? Because while memory is amazing, it is far from perfect. Our brains aren't designed to remember every name we hear, plan we make or day we experience. Just because your memory sometimes fails doesn't mean it's broken or succumbing to disease. Forgetting is actually part of being human. In Remember, neuroscientist and acclaimed novelist Lisa Genova delves into how memories are made and how we retrieve them. In explaining whether forgotten memories are temporarily inaccessible or erased forever and why some memories are built to exist for only a few seconds while others can last a lifetime, we're shown the clear distinction between normal forgetting (where you parked your car) and forgetting due to Alzheimer's (that you own a car). Remember shows us how to create a better relationship with our memory - so we no longer have to fear it any more, which can be life-changing.

eBook - ePub
Remember
The Science of Memory and the Art of Forgetting - A New York Times bestseller!
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
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Topic
MedicineSubtopic
Diseases & AllergiesPART I
How We Remember

1

Making Memories 101
When Akira Haraguchi, a retired engineer from Japan, was sixty-nine years oldâan age most of us associate with senior discounts and a less-than-optimal memoryâhe memorized pi, a nonrepeating, infinite number with no pattern, to 111,700 digits. Thatâs the number 3.14159 . . . carried out to 111,695 more decimal places. From memory! If this sounds completely mind-blowing, Iâm with you. Surely, youâre thinking, Haraguchi must have been a child prodigy. Or perhaps heâs a mathematical genius or a savant. Heâs none of these. Heâs a regular guy with a healthy, aging brain, which means something maybe even more mind-blowingâyour brain is also capable of memorizing 111,700 digits of pi.
We can learn and remember anythingâthe unique sound of your childâs voice, the face of a new friend, where you parked your car, that time you walked to the market all by yourself to buy sour cream when you were four years old, the words to the latest Taylor Swift song. The average adult has memorized the sound, spelling, and meaning of 20,000 to 100,000 words. Chess masters have memorized in the ballpark of 100,000 possible moves. Concert pianists who can play Rachmaninoffâs third concerto have committed the coordination of almost 30,000 notes to memory. And these same folks donât need the sheet music to play Bach, Chopin, or Schumann, either.
Our memories can hold information that is deeply meaningful or nonsensical, simple or complex, and its capacity appears to be limitless. We can ask it to remember anything. And under the right conditions, it will.
How can memory do all of this? Neurologically speaking, what even is a memory? How is a memory made? Where are memories stored? And how do we retrieve them?
Making a memory literally changes your brain. Every memory you have is a result of a lasting physical alteration in your brain in response to what you experienced. You went from not knowing something to knowing something, from never before having experienced today to having lived another day. And to be able to remember tomorrow what happened today means that your brain has to change.
How does it change? First, the sensory, emotional, and factual elements of what you experience are perceived through the portals of your senses. You see, hear, smell, taste, and feel.
Letâs say itâs the first evening of summer, and youâre at your favorite beach with your best friends and their families. You see, among other things, your children playing soccer on the beach and a spectacular sunset glowing in the sky. You hear âBorn This Way,â one of your favorite Lady Gaga songs, playing over a portable speaker. Your daughter runs up to you, wailing, pointing to her bright pink ankle. A jellyfish has just stung her. Luckily, your friend carries a small container of meat tenderizer with her for this very scenario. You make a paste of the tenderizer and rub it on the sting, relieving your daughterâs pain almost instantly (this really works). You smell the salty ocean air and smoke from the bonfire. You taste crisp, cold white wine, fresh briny oysters, and gooey sweet sâmores. You feel happy.
The sight of your children playing soccer has nothing to do with Lady Gaga or jellyfish or the taste of oysters, unless these fleeting, separate experiences become linked. To become a memory that you can later recallâRemember that first night of summer, when we ate oysters and sâmores and listened to Lady Gaga while the kids played soccer on the beach and little Susie Q was stung by a jellyfish?âall that previously unrelated neural activity becomes a connected pattern of neural activity. This pattern then persists through structural changes created between those neurons. The lasting change in neural architecture and connectivity can later be reexperiencedâor rememberedâthrough the activation of this now-linked neural circuit. This is memory.
Creating a memory takes place in four basic steps: Encoding. Your brain captures the sights, sounds, information, emotion, and meaning of what you perceived and paid attention to and translates all this into neurological language. Consolidation. Your brain links the previously unrelated collection of neural activity into a single pattern of associated connections. Storage. This pattern of activity is maintained over time through persistent structural and chemical changes in those neurons. Retrieval. You can now, through the activation of these associated connections, revisit, recall, know, and recognize what you learned and experienced.
All four steps have to work for you to create a long-term memory that can be consciously retrieved. You have to put the information into your brain. You have to weave the information together. You have to store that woven information via stable changes in your brain. And then you have to fetch the woven information when you want to access it.
How does a constellation of previously unrelated neural activity become bound together into a connected neural network that we experience as a singular memory? Weâre not entirely sure of how this happens, but we know a great deal about where it happens. The information contained within an experience that is collected by your brainâthe sensory perceptions, the language, the who, what, where, when, and whyâis linked by a part of your brain called the hippocampus.
The hippocampus, a seahorse-shaped structure deep in the middle of your brain, is essential for memory consolidation. What does that mean? The hippocampus binds your memories. It is your memory weaver. What happened? Where and when did it happen? What does it mean? How did I feel about it? The hippocampus links all these separate pieces of information from disparate parts of the brain together, knitting them into a retrievable unit of associated data, a neural network that, when stimulated, is experienced as a memory.
So your hippocampus is necessary for the formation of any new memories that you can later consciously retrieve. If your hippocampus is damaged, your ability to create new memories will be impaired. Alzheimerâs disease begins its rampage in the hippocampus. As a result, the first symptoms of this disease are typically forgetting what happened earlier today or what someone just said a few minutes ago and repeating the same story or question over and over. With an impaired hippocampus, people with Alzheimerâs have trouble creating new memories.
Moreover, the consolidation mediated by the hippocampus is a time-dependent process that can be disrupted. The formation of a memory that can be retrieved tomorrow, next week, or twenty years from now requires a series of molecular events that take time. During that time, if something interferes with the processing of a nascent memory in the hippocampus, the memory can be degraded and possibly lost.
Say youâre a boxer, a rugby player, or a football player, and you sustain a blow to the head. If I were to interview you immediately after you got clocked, you would be able to tell me about the punch, the play, the details of what was happening. But if I were to ask you the next day, you might have no memory of what happened. The information that was in the process of becoming linked by your hippocampus to form a new, lasting memory was disrupted and was never fully consolidated. The blow to your head caused amnesia. Those memories are gone.
Damage to the hippocampus probably explains why Trevor Rees-Jones, bodyguard to Princess Diana and sole survivor of the car crash that killed her and Dodi Fyed all those years ago, still canât remember any details of what happened leading up to the accident. He sustained a devastating head injury, requiring many surgeries and about 150 pieces of titanium to reconstruct his face. Because the various elements of his pre-crash experience had not been fully linked together by his hippocampus when his brain was injured, they were never stored. Those memories of what happened were never made.
What happens if you donât have a hippocampus at all? Henry Molaison, or HM, as he is called in the thousands of papers citing his case for over half a century, is the most famous case study in the history of neuroscience. When Henry was a child, he fell off his bicycle, fracturing his skull. Whether because of this head injury or a family history of epilepsy no one is sure, but from the age of ten on, he regularly experienced debilitating seizures. Seventeen years later, his seizures still unrelenting and unresponsive to drug treatment, he was desperate and willing to try anything to get some relief. So on September 1, 1953, at the age of twenty-seven, Henry agreed to undergo experimental brain surgery.
The year 1953 was still well within the era of lobotomies and psychosurgeries, procedures that involved the indelicate removal or severing of brain regions to treat mental illnesses such as bipolar disorder and schizophrenia and brain disorders such as epilepsy. These kinds of surgical interventions are deemed grotesque, barbaric, and ineffective today, but back then, they were routinely performed by respected neurosurgeons. With the goal of eliminating Henryâs seizures, a neurosurgeon named William Scoville removed the hippocampus and surrounding brain tissue from both sides of Henryâs brain.
Hereâs the good news. Henryâs seizures almost entirely subsided. And his personality, intelligence, language, motor function, and ability to perceive were undamaged by the procedure. So in that sense, the surgery was a success. But he had tragically traded one plague for another. The bad news was catastrophic. For the next fifty-five years until his death at the age of eighty-two, Henry could no longer consciously remember any new information or experience for more than a few moments. He would never again create a consciously held long-term memory.
He read the same magazines and watched the same movies over and over as if he had never seen them before. He greeted his doctor and the psychologists who studied him as if meeting them for the first time every single day. A Canadian psychologist named Brenda Milner studied Henry for more than fifty years, and in all that time, he never recognized her. He couldnât learn any new words. Vocabulary introduced to our lexicon after 1953âwords like granola, Jacuzzi, laptop, and emojiâremained completely foreign to him. He could remember a number for a few minutes if he repeated it to himself over and over, but once he stopped rehearsing it, the number vanished forever. Whatâs more, he would have no memory of having been asked to remember any number. He couldnât retain what happened minutes later, ever again.
So any new information from today that you perceive and attend to, that you find interesting, special, surprising, useful, meaningful, or, well, memorable, will be processed by your hippocampus for consolidation into memory. The hippocampus continues to repeatedly activate the parts of the brain involved in what-is-to-be-remembered until those parts of the brain become a stable, connected pattern of activity, essentially wired together.
While you need a hippocampus to form new memories, once they are made, they donât reside there. So where are memories stored? In no one place. They are distributed throughout the parts of the brain that registered the initial experience. Unlike perception and movement, which reside in specific addresses in our brains, we donât have specialized memory-storage neurons or a memory cortex. Vision, hearing, smell, touch, and movement can all be mapped to discrete geographic regions in the brain. At the back of the brain, we have a visual cortex, where neurons process what we see. We have an auditory cortex where we hear and an olfactory cortex where we perceive odor. Pain, temperature, and touch are housed in the somatosensory cortex on the top of your head. Wiggling your big toe can be mapped to the activation of a specific set of neurons in your motor cortex.
Memory is different. When we remember something, weâre not withdrawing from a âmemory bank.â There is no memory bank. Long-term memories donât reside in one particular neighborhood in your brain.
Memory is stored throughout your brain in the pattern of neural activity that was stimulated when the event or information was first experienced. Your memory of last nightâs dinner requires the activation of the same constellation of disparate neurons that perceived, paid attention to, and processed your initial experience of that meal. Now, when some piece of the memory from last nightâs dinner is activatedâsomeone asks you if youâve ever eaten at Trattoria Il Panino in their neighborhoodâthe question triggers the activation of the connected network and you remember much, perhaps even all, about that time you ate there. The weather was lovely, so my friend Tiff and I walked there. We had a conversational Italian lesson over dinner with John. I ate mushroom risotto. Delizioso!
Memories physically exist in your head through a neural network of associations. My nana died of Alzheimerâs in 2002. When I remember her,...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Introduction
- Part I
- Part II
- Part III
- Appendix: What to Do About It All
- Suggested Reading
- Acknowledgments
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