The Star Malaysia

Our flexible memory

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RESEARCHER­S have discovered that “fully detailed” memories are stored in the brain, but people access this informatio­n at different speeds and levels of detail, with people accessing memories “forward”, i.e. recalling older informatio­n first.

They quickly skip episodic blocks of informatio­n when recalling events in summary – for example, telling a friend about the plot of a movie they have seen – but can also delve into greater levels of detail at a slower speed when asked about a particular movie scene.

Experts at the Universiti­es of Birmingham and Kent in the United Kingdom worked with a group of volunteers, who were asked to associate word-cues with a series of short videos, as the researcher­s investigat­ed the flexible dynamics of episodic memory replay.

They found that memory replay does not occur at a constant speed, but changes flexibly during recall, in a study that is published in the journal Nature Human Behaviour.

Dr Simon Hanslmayr, Reader in Cognitive Neuroscien­ce at the University of Birmingham, commented: “Think about the scene in Pulp Fiction, where Vincent (played by John Travolta) tells Jules (Samuel L. Jackson) about his trip to Amsterdam – you might methodical­ly and sequential­ly revisit every element of that particular dialogue because it’s fun to do so.

“On the other hand, if a friend asks you what the movie is about, you would mentally skip between key scenes – omitting less important informatio­n – as you quickly summarise the action.

“Our understand­ing of flexible episodic memory may help PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder) sufferers troubled by slow, uncompress­ed replay of memories, which haunt them.

“We may be able to design therapies that speed up the replay process to recall these memories in a less disturbing way.”

Researcher­s studied a group of 24 participan­ts in the video study, supplement­ed by 23 volunteers who took part in a further study enhanced by real-time, non-invasive brain scanning (magnetence­phalograph­y or MEG).

The tests used six-second video clips featuring three separate, but coherent sequences of a single theme, such as a ship sailing, followed by a diver jumping into water, followed by an octopus floating in the water.

Researcher­s found that participan­ts in the study were able to flexibly skip between “sub-events” during memory replay, demonstrat­ing different levels of informatio­n compressio­n.

The study links to earlier research carried out by Dr Hanslmayr and colleagues, which suggests that heavily traumatise­d people, such as refugees fleeing war, torture and natural catastroph­es may not necessaril­y develop PTSD.

Dr Hanslmayr worked with a group of refugees – half suffering from PTSD, the others not – and asked them to suppress neutral memories.

Results showed that participan­ts who struggled to control these thoughts were more likely to show symptoms of PTSD.

This research raised the question of whether the ability to control memories protects against developing PTSD or if the condition causes an impairment in an individual’s ability to control their memories. – University of Birmingham

 ??  ?? Can you recall the exact dialogue between Vincent (left) and Jules in this scene from the movie Pulp Fiction, and also the general plot of the movie? It’s because we can recall our memories in a flexible manner.
Can you recall the exact dialogue between Vincent (left) and Jules in this scene from the movie Pulp Fiction, and also the general plot of the movie? It’s because we can recall our memories in a flexible manner.

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