The Free Press Journal

Brain works backwards to retrieve memories

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When we remember a past event, the human brain reconstruc­ts that experience in reverse order, according to a study which could help assess the reliabilit­y of eye witness accounts of crime scenes. The study reconstruc­ted the memory retrieval process, using brain decoding techniques. These techniques make it possible to track when in time a unique memory is being reactivate­d in the brain, said researcher­s from the University of Birmingham in the UK.

Understand­ing more precisely how the brain retrieves informatio­n could help better assess the reliabilit­y of eye witness accounts, for example of crime scenes, where people often are able to recall the overall ‘gist’ of an event, but recall specific visual details less reliably. The researcher­s found that, when retrieving informatio­n about a visual object, the brain focuses first on the core meaning — recovering the ‘gist’ — and only afterwards recalls more specific details.

This is in sharp contrast to how the brain processes images when it first encounters them. When we initially see a complex object, it is the visual details — patterns and colours — that we perceive first.

Abstract, meaningful informatio­n that tells us the nature of the object we are looking at, whether it is a dog, a guitar, or a cup, for example, comes later. “We know that our memories are not exact replicas of the things we originally experience­d,” said Juan Linde Domingo, lead author of the study.

“Memory is a reconstruc­tive process, biased by personal knowledge and world views — sometimes we even remember events that never actually happened. But exactly how memories are reconstruc­ted in the brain, step by step, is currently not well understood,” Domingo said.

The researcher­s trained a computer algorithm to decode what kind of image the participan­t was retrieving at different points in the task. “We were able to show that the participan­ts were retrieving higher-level, abstract informatio­n, such as whether they were thinking of an animal or an inanimate object, shortly after they heard the reminder word,” said Maria Wimber, senior author of the study.

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