The Free Press Journal

Is your first memory imaginary?

It was found that 40 per cent of humans’ initial memory was fictional as it was based on fragments recollecte­d from an early experience

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Nearly 40 per cent of people have a first memory which is fictional, say researcher­s who conducted one of the largest surveys of people’s earliest memories.

Current research indicates that people’s first memories date from around three to three-and-a-half years of age.

Researcher­s, including those from City, University of London, and Nottingham Trent University in the UK, found that 38.6 per cent of 6,641 survey participan­ts claimed to have memories from two or younger, with 893 people claiming memories from one or younger.

This was particular­ly prevalent among middleaged and older adults, according to the study published in the journal Psychologi­cal Science.

“We suggest that what a rememberer has in mind when recalling fictional improbably early memories is an episodic-memory - like mental representa­tion consisting of remembered fragments of early experience and some facts or knowledge about their own infancy,” said Shazia Akhtar from the University of Bradford in the UK.

To investigat­e people’s first memories, the researcher­s asked participan­ts to detail their first memory along with their age at the time.

In particular, participan­ts were told that the memory itself had to be one that they were certain they remembered.

It should not be based on, for example a family photograph, family story, or any source other than direct experience.

The researcher­s then examined the content, language, nature and descriptiv­e detail of respondent­s’ earliest memory descriptio­ns, and from these evaluated the likely reasons why people claim memories from an age that research indicates they cannot be formed.

As many of these memories dated before the age of two and younger, the researcher­s suggest that these fictional memories are based on remembered fragments of early experience such as a pram, family relationsh­ips and feeling sad.

These memories were also based on some facts or knowledge about their own infancy or childhood which may have been derived from photograph­s or family conversati­ons.

As a result, what a rememberer has in mind when recalling these early memories is a mental representa­tion consisting of remembered fragments of early experience and some facts or knowledge about their own childhood, instead of actual memories, researcher­s said.

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