Forgetting May Be Part of the Process of Remembering – New York Times
Forgetting May Be Part of the Process of Remembering – New York Times
Interesting article in Nature Neuroscience.
In all, this research suggests that memories are more often crowded out than lost. An ideal memory improvement program, Dr. Anderson said, “would include a course on how to impair your memory. Your head is full of a surprising number of things that you don’t need to know.”
manon
June 7, 2007 @ 10:55 am
… that’s a quite impressive kind of holiday-literature, you’re carrying through Italy… (no detective pockets on board?). Anyway, very interesting subject, going to read it.
admin
October 21, 2009 @ 9:02 am
great post on memory improvement
Debbie Thomas
April 27, 2010 @ 3:16 am
Thank you so much for this article, as someone ‘recovering’ from PTSD, one major symptom being ‘memory – WHAT memory?’ – except for the traumatic ones of course – this resonates with my experience of being more or less consciously aware sometimes of ‘going into a tunnel’ in order to be able to focus/cope, and being unware of what’s going on outside that tunnel including things that have happened that do not help with the current task – only now, 2yrs after some treatment (short-term CBT only), are some memories long-forgotten coming back, as well as the function of short-term and nominal memory, which are different from this memory ‘suppression’ – Encouraging stuff