How Our Brains Make Memories
Surprising new research about the act of remembering may help people with post-traumatic stress disorder
- By Greg Miller
- Photographs by Gilles Mingasson
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2010, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 6)
To Nader and his colleagues, the experiment supports the idea that a memory is re-formed in the process of calling it up. “From our perspective, this looks a lot like memory reconsolidation,” says Oliver Hardt, a postdoctoral researcher in Nader’s lab.
Hardt and Nader say something similar might happen with flashbulb memories. People tend to have accurate memories for the basic facts of a momentous event—for example, that a total of four planes were hijacked in the September 11 attacks—but often misremember personal details such as where they were and what they were doing at the time. Hardt says this could be because these are two different types of memories that get reactivated in different situations. Television and other media coverage reinforce the central facts. But recalling the experience to other people may allow distortions to creep in. “When you retell it, the memory becomes plastic, and whatever is present around you in the environment can interfere with the original content of the memory,” Hardt says. In the days following September 11, for example, people likely repeatedly rehashed their own personal stories—“where were you when you heard the news?”—in conversations with friends and family, perhaps allowing details of other people’s stories to mix with their own.
Since Nader’s original experiment, dozens of studies with rats, worms, chicks, honeybees and college students have suggested that even long-standing memories can be disrupted when recalled. Nader’s goal is to tie the animal research, and the clues it yields about the bustling molecular machinery of the synapse, to the everyday human experience of remembering.
Some experts think he is getting ahead of himself, especially when he makes connections between human memory and these findings in rats and other animals. “He oversells it a little bit,” says Kandel.
Daniel Schacter, a psychologist at Harvard University who studies memory, agrees with Nader that distortions can occur when people reactivate memories. The question is whether reconsolidation—which he thinks Nader has demonstrated compellingly in rat experiments—is the reason for the distortions. “The direct evidence isn’t there yet to show that the two things are related,” Schacter says. “It’s an intriguing possibility that people will now have to follow up on.”
A real-world test of Nader’s theory of memory reconsolidation is taking place a few miles from his Montreal office, at the Douglas Mental Health University Institute. Alain Brunet, a psychologist, is running a clinical trial involving people with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The hope is that caregivers might be able to weaken the hold of traumatic memories that haunt patients during the day and invade their dreams at night.
Brunet knows how powerful traumatic memories can be. In 1989, when he was studying for a master’s degree in psychology at the University of Montreal, a man armed with a semiautomatic rifle walked into an engineering classroom on campus, separated the men from the women and shot the women. The gunman continued the massacre in other classrooms and hallways of the university’s École Polytechnique, shooting 27 people and killing 14 women before killing himself. It was Canada’s worst mass shooting.
Brunet, who was on the other side of campus that day, says, “this was a very powerful experience for me.” He says he was surprised to discover how little was known at the time about the psychological impact of such events and how to help people who’ve lived through them. He decided to study traumatic stress and how to treat it.
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Related topics: Brain Health Thought Innovation
Additional Sources
“Effect of post-retrieval propranolol on psychophysiologic responding during subsequent script-driven traumatic imagery in post-traumatic stress disorder,” Alain Brunet et al., Journal of Psychiatric Research, May 2008
“Disruption of reconsolidation but not consolidation of auditory fear conditioning by noradrenergic blockade in the amygdala,” J. Dębiec and J. E. LeDoux, Neuroscience, October 2, 2004
“Event Memory and Autobiographical Memory for the Events of September 11, 2001,” Kathy Pezdek, Applied Cognitive Psychology, January 8, 2004
“Fear memories require protein synthesis in the amygdala for reconsolidation after retrieval,” Karim Nader et al., Nature, August 17, 2000
“Reconsolidation of memory after its reactivation,” Jean Przybyslawski and Susan J. Sara, Behavioural Brain Research, March 1997
“Semantic Integration of Verbal Information into a Visual Memory,” Elizabeth F. Loftus et al., Journal of Experimental Psychology, January 1978
“Retrograde Amnesia Produced by Electroconvulsive Shock after Reactivation of a Consolidated Memory Trace,” James R. Misanin et al., Science, May 3, 1968









Comments (40)
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Fantastic article. For anyone further interested in changing memories without the need for pharmacological intervention, FasterEFT provides an effective solution which has helped in many cases of PTSD, amongst many other issues. It works to clear the emotional attachment that we apply to our memories and to literally change or re-imprint the memory to one that feels good. see www.fastereft.com. Sally Ulph www.newmindtherapy.co.uk
Posted by sally ulph on February 4,2013 | 03:12 PM
this was a informative arcitle
Posted by Not Needed on January 26,2013 | 06:16 PM
If you are seeking a new and different explanation of the truth that makes sense, search for "Truth Contest" in Google and click the 1st result, then click on "The Present" and read what it says. This is truth you can check. What it says will turn this world around if it reaches enough people. You will see what I mean when you read the first page.
Posted by Smiles on January 23,2013 | 07:00 PM
THANK YOU GIVING THIS VALUABLE INFORMATION
Posted by RAVALI on November 1,2012 | 11:34 AM
Im in the memories change camp. For years I had the image of my fathers tombstone set in my head with his dates of birth and dates of death and his name. When I returned dozens of years after I was suprised to find it only had the years listed. It was naturally a pretty important detail and I thought it was set in stone. Amazingly when I retold my story to my older sister she said she had also had the dates image in her head. I guess the dates January 26, 1917 and January 29 1969 were so important to us that we both added those facts. And the cemetary and death was something our family never spoke of ( or maybe I dont remember that either!)
Posted by Frose on October 3,2012 | 04:05 PM
When a man lost their memory, then how he is react.
Posted by Vashist on October 1,2012 | 02:00 PM
I beg your pardon, but this statement is wrong: "He recalled seeing television footage on September 11 of the first plane hitting the north tower of the World Trade Center. But he was surprised to learn that such footage aired for the first time the following day. Apparently he wasn’t alone: a 2003 study of 569 college students found that 73 percent shared this misperception." http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/How-Our-Brains-Make-Memories.html?c=y&page=1 My friend Pam and I had taken an Israeli tour with Zola Levitt Ministries. We had been to Petra, Galilee and were in Jerusalem on Sept. 11 when the towers were hit. We were leaving the next day and had decided to take a walk over to the King George Hotel to look the decor in the various lobbies I had heard about. A man recognized us as Americans and told us about the plane crash at the Pentagon. We hurried back to our room and turned on the news. The only news channel we had been able tto find in english was CNN. I stood in front of the TV and watched the plane crash into the second building which then fell to the ground. I am sure it was a video because of the lapse of time. We could not leave the next day because all the planes were grounded in the U.S. We had to pay for another day at the hotel and left the next day. There were videos very quickly after the event. If you want documentation of the trip, I have it. We had paid for trip insurance and they paid us back for the hotel expenses. Constance Abbott, Newport MI, 48166, U.S.A.
Posted by on September 2,2012 | 07:46 PM
The example of the plane on September 11th seems sort of ridiculous. It certainly doesn't provide new insight into how the brain processes memory. Obviously, if one were to answer without thinking too much about it, "I saw the first plane hit the tower" makes intuitive sense because to the viewer and to the world (for the first 24+ hours) the first video footage that aired within minutes of the attack WAS experienced first.
Posted by Mamie on July 11,2012 | 01:33 AM
Excellant studies!
Posted by Angela Mason on June 19,2012 | 05:53 AM
I thank it cool that u guys are all learning about the brain
Posted by on April 23,2012 | 04:00 PM
Some of us have a near "photographic" memory. I often end up in minor arguments with my wife as her memory modifies itself over time - usually in a direction which makes HER the "perfect" one and whatever happened "my fault."
She's even gone so far as to accuse me of falsifying papers or even modifying a videotape to support "my version of events."
She literally has trouble accurately remembering what she had for breakfast while I can "see" minute details of things years later.
On the other hand, she REALLY scrambles me up when she "helps me" by "putting my stuff away (read: where SHE wants it) for me.
If she'd left it wherever I put it, I can find it by "zooming out" on my mental image of whatever "it" is.
When she moves it, it's usually LOST as she'll usually have no idea where she decided it "belongs" when asked to retrieve it later.
I'm convinced that such matters are at times - with folks possessing less self-control - a recurring cause of serious marital conflict...
Posted by Dedicated_Dad on December 18,2011 | 04:53 PM
Speaking Of Memory And Of Culture-Genetics
A. From “Speaking of Memory, Eric Kandel”
http://the-scientist.com/2011/10/01/interview-speaking-of-memory/
Are there unanswerable questions in neuroscience; ones that should be left to philosophers and poets?
Who’s to know what will emerge 50 to 100 years from now. But for the foreseeable future I think it’s our lack of ingenuity that is limiting, not the intrinsic difficulties; the problems are difficult—but not insurmountable. Even love?
I think there’ll always be magic to life, even though science explains a great deal.
B. BioCulture
June 16, 2006
http://universe-life.com/2006/06/16/bioculture/
To paraphrase a statement by Eugene Thacker in the opening pages of Biomedia (ISBN 0-8166-4353-9):
I posit that as every organism's cultural element is an artifact which involves biological intra-/inter-cell expression and/or process, biological and cultural domains are not ontologically distinct, but instead culture inheres in biology. Dov Henis
C. On “our lack of ingenuity” and “science explains”
Bigger Human Brain, Horses And Wagon
http://universe-life.com/2011/10/19/bigger-human-brain-horse-and-wagon/
On Culture And Genetics, Horses And Wagon
http://universe-life.com/2011/08/26/on-culture-and-genetics-horses-and-wagon/
If you saw it once, you saw it a million times: it’s the horses pulling, not the wagon pushing !
Dov Henis
(comments from 22nd century)
http://universe-life.com/
Posted by Dov Henis on November 18,2011 | 11:14 AM
I don't see how thinking you saw the first plane hit the tower on 9/11, when you really saw the second plane says that memory place tricks on us. Here's the footage that aired on 9/11: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ys41jnL2Elk
Had it been labelled "this is the second plane" then we might have some pretty conclusive evidence.
So far, the Challenger and 9/11 tragedies have been used to try to prove that memory is faulty. Which national tragedy is next?
Posted by Lynn Murphy on May 15,2011 | 02:38 PM
Neither Nader's nor Brunet's study as discussed in this article proves that memories can be reconsolidated.
Nader's studies shows that rats didn't react after hearing a tone. There are many possible explanations for this. Perhaps the emotional component of the memory was weakened, but the memory still existed. And rats aren't human beings.
Brunet's study stated "The treatment didn’t erase the patients’ memory of what had happened to them; rather, it seems to have changed the quality of that memory. “Week after week the emotional tone of the memory seems weaker,” Brunet says. “They start to care less about that memory.”
In other words, the memory was still there.
As per these studies, the theory of memory reconsolidation is unproven.
And it is quite different to give an animal an electric shock or a drug that interferes with a particular neurotransmitter just after they were prompted to recall the memory and then to compare this to simple suggestion or misleading questions in humans.
The Loftus study as quoted in this article questioned peripheral memories, but not the major important details of the memory. Some memory theorists have believed that peripheral details may be subject to manipulation but the major details are not.
The accuracy of Loftus' work has also been questioned, see http://users.owt.com/crook/memory/
A good resource on the neurobiology of memory is http://www.trauma-pages.com/a/vanderk2.php which discusses the stability and accuracy of memories of stressful events
Posted by E. Stricker on May 14,2011 | 02:52 PM
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