Showing posts with label memory. Show all posts
Showing posts with label memory. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

The Illusion of Coherence

Think you know how you think? Think again. Your memory is full of holes, and your memories might not even be real. Our sense of self (the ego) glosses over all of this stuff in the endeavor of fostering a sense of personal continuity, but if you look closely at your experience of the world, everything begins to come apart. Don't feel too bad about it. Cosmologists have noted that physical matter exhibits the same behavior, for what it's worth.

Read more here: 5 Mind Blowing Ways Your Memory Plays Tricks On You via Cracked.com

Saturday, May 14, 2011

If Memory Serves

New research on marine snails suggests that science is drawing closer to the day when memories may be erased at will, like something out of The Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind. There's some debate as to whether this could possibly be a good thing - after all, even our worst traumas prove formative and can mold us into wiser, happier people in the long run.

But what about those trapped in the endless nightmare of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder? Sometimes the mechanisms in the brain for dealing with bad memories become stuck, and we lose our ability to move on.

Memory is more than just a read/write function of the brain though - it's made up of somatic feedback loops and automated responses that arise from the body, not from the mind. I wonder, if we remove the memory, would that necessarily remove the behavior? Or would it perhaps just remove the fulcrum against which we might eventually get some traction to change the out-of-control distress response?

My father died of complications related to senile dementia, and I've watched several other close relatives falter under the gradual erosion of Alzheimer's disease. From my own observations I am unconvinced that memory erasure would bring definitive relief from behavioral problems, but I'm glad to see that we're learning so much about the physical mechanisms involved.

Read more here: Even If We Could Erase Bad Memories, Should We? via TheAtlantic.com