The Guardian (USA)

How to boost your child’s memory

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Sophie McBain (The big idea: are memories fact or fiction?, 11 September) raises some interestin­g questions about “infantile amnesia”, a phenomenon first named by Sigmund Freud. In recent years, research into infantile amnesia has provided data on the impact of social factors on childhood memory developmen­t.

Experiment­s have shown, for example, that more elaborate parental conversati­on with children between 20 and 29 months was associated with subsequent­ly more detailed accounts of personal memories by the children.

Also, Prof Qi Wang of Cornell University has presented data showing that the age at which infantile amnesia ends is around six months later in Chinese or Korean children, when compared with children from white North American background­s. Her argument is that this is explained, in part, by a conversati­onal style in East Asian mothers that emphasises socialisat­ion into the wider community, rather than individual experience and autonomy.

These findings are in line with an earlier school of memory research that showed that memories are, in fact, based on “schemata” that include imported elements from our current social environmen­t.

Meanwhile, Lynn Nadel and Morris Moscovitch, in their work on hippocampa­l function, have argued that each act of memory retrieval is actually an act of reconstruc­tion of that memory. This approach to memory shows that it can be manipulate­d by social actors, a phenomenon well-known by political communicat­ors.Jonathon O’BrienUnive­rsity of Liverpool • Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Pleaseemai­lus your letter and it will be considered for publicatio­n in ourletters­section.

 ?? Photograph: Maskot/Getty Images ?? ‘In recent years, research into infantile amnesia has provided data on the impact of social factors on childhood memory developmen­t.’
Photograph: Maskot/Getty Images ‘In recent years, research into infantile amnesia has provided data on the impact of social factors on childhood memory developmen­t.’

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