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Benjamin Storm of UCSC’s Psychology department keeps up with the latest breakthroughs in our understanding of memory. (Photo by Chip Scheuer)

Benjamin Storm of UCSC’s Psychology department keeps up with the latest breakthroughs in our understanding of memory. (Photo by Chip Scheuer)

When I was about four years old I had a play date at Meryl Streep’s house. It was just an informal kind of a thing where my dad, who built sculptures designed by Streep’s husband, Don Gummer, dumped me off at the front door and picked me up a few hours later.

I remember very little: getting lost in a maze of hallways, losing my velcro-fastened shoes and hanging out with the Gummer girls in a large bathroom, where they seemed to do a lot of their hanging out.

It was a recent article in The New York Timesabout one of those sisters, the now-28-year-old Mamie, that jarred my tattered memory of her parading around in a white gown, and ordering the younger ones to follow her lead. I remember discarded garments on checkered floors, shiny blond hair and a spiral staircase, all of which seemed incredibly glamorous at the time, and quite surreal two decades later. 

It led me to ponder the recollection of memories: was the bathroom floor actually checkered? And if the brain records every stimuli, then why is only a small portion encoded as memory? Can further details be unlocked from those cherished memories in the vault of our psyches? And if not, how do we maximize the capacity of our memories?

I took these questions to Benjamin Storm, Ph.D, a UC Santa Cruz professor of Psychology, and an expert on memory and cognition. Storm delivered the axe to my false notion that the brain is like a recording device, documenting every single stimuli that filters through the wrinkles of the mysterious organ.

“That’s just not the way it works,” he says. “From perception all the way to memory, it’s a constructive process. So, the way our brain is built is so that we are pulling information in and then constructing reality from it. And then as you’re remembering, you’re also reconstructing earlier constructions.”

This reveals a startling truth: there is no ultimately “true” memory, but rather recreations of what we think happened. This also explains why memories from childhood often take on more of a dreamlike quality.

“Over time we’re remembering our prior rememberings, and then we imagine more, and then we fill in gaps and the memory changes over time. So one reason why our memories of early childhood may seem surreal is because they’re rememberings of rememberings that are reconstructed… and when we remember our past we tend to color them based on what we think now, and what we believe now,” says Storm.

But the fact that our memories can be highly inaccurate reflections of reality shouldn’t matter, says Storm. “Because they’re still the memories we are using to define us now,” he says.

And though we can’t just flip a switch and remember everything exactly as it happened (there is substantial evidence that, especially in hypnosis, false memories can be constructed), cues are effective in stimulating memories: smells, music from a specific time and revisiting the site almost always bring memories, whether traumatic or happy, to the surface.

Like anything else, improving memory performance can come with practice. Rehearsing and retrieving information, keeping diaries and talking about the past helps maintain the memory.

Another, more obvious thing helps, as well: “Just stay healthy,” says Storm. “Exercise, healthy diet and sleep are probably the three most important things that you can do to help preserve your memory, especially as you age.”

Staying intellectually engaged is vital too, as the brain appears to be functionally unlimited. “So the more knowledge we have, the easier it is to encode new knowledge,” says Storm.

Storm’s latest research also suggests that it’s okay to let some things go. In fact, it’s necessary to keep our memories sharp.

“We tend to think of forgetting as something bad [or] a failure of memory. But more and more, we’re seeing that it’s a sign that it’s working well, that we need to forget in order to better remember what’s important,” he says. “We need to have certain information become inaccessible… we’re seeing the memory system is designed in such a way that allows us to forget. And if we weren’t able to forget, we would probably be worse off.”

  • https://www.santacruz.com/news/2012/10/16/how_we_remember Rochelle

    Find what Dr. Storm explains how memories are shaped and distorted. What really resonates for me is that memories are what we define ourselves in the here and now. I feel I lost my autobiographical memories approximately sometime in 2004 following medical procedure. To clarify, I feel I recall my childhood until approximately to age 16 or 17. For several years, nobody believed me, told to see a therapist, I mentally blocking. I wasn’t able to work anymore in the medical profession, in fact, spent over an hour driving around the east bay one day unable to find the medical center I had worked at for ten years. I finally pulled my car over, parked and in disbelief cried and cried. Then I sustained a mild traumatic brain injury in 2008. This resulted in a multitude of cognitive deficits, vision and hearing difficulties along with major short term memory issues now along with the longterm memory loss. The first neurologist I saw dismissed me as I was fine just depressed. I felt often I was descending into insanity, the isolation was unbearable. But I persevered and finally was treated by a wonderful neurophycoloigist in Berkeley where I had been living at the time all this occurred. After several days of testing, he validated all I reported to him as to be true and he welcomed me into his Lifeskills program he facilitates. He explained I was able to info in but when I try to retrieve it most often not able. I was told I have delayed onset cognitive deficits, which has been the case. I had become dyslexic after the TBI but have since taught myself to reread, took almost a year, but still so much problems remembering what I do read, much less constantly inverting the words,etc. I was assured I didn’t loss my intellect, which has actually caused me so much grief, family, friends, acquaintances don’t believe what it takes to get thru a day, the extreme sense of loss I feel on so many levels, professionally, financially, my freedom(unable to drive anymore) much less the extreme memory loss. I don’t feel I fit in anywhere. I am told too often by many close to me that my memory loss isn’t really much, that I over react if I tear up or have upset feelings when I don’t recall something I think I should, that everybody forgets where their keys are, I need to just deal with it. Well I hang my keys up consistently. I don’t lforget where I put them, ” like everybody does”. It would be nice to remember something about my college graduation, the big road trip I took with a sister and two nieces through Yellowstone up to Canada across and down thru WA and Oregon. Recently made the mistake of saying would like to go to Yellowstone one day to see what it is like, to that sister, look of annoyance on her face when she pointed I have been there I must remember our trip. So hard to explain in that moment the humiliation I felt, as usual for again annoying a loved one by saying I don’t remember. I feel I live in a bubble, for a couple years now I try really hard around family members to act like I know what they may be referring to from the past that I don’t have a clue now. I look for life’s silver lining everyday, and express much gratitude for what I do have, but who am I when I can’t connect the dots of my past life. I am always looking for some kind of support group, but I don’t succeed. I feel so much grief from so much loss,yet grief support groups are for the loss of a loved one, when I inquire. There are amazing programs for veterans cropping up now for those who have also suffered a traumatic brain injury, thank goodness, so maybe down the road for those such as myself on the fringes of needing these programs too, it will come. That is what I hope for, if not for me but others that are sure to eventually follow lie me. With ever so much gratitude thanks for letting me express my issues concerning the importance of memory. Please excuse my spelling mistakes, I won the eighth grade spelling championship but that was then this now.

  • https://www.santacruz.com/news/how_we_remember.html Rochelle

    Find what Dr. Storm explains how memories are shaped and distorted. What really resonates for me is that memories are what we define ourselves in the here and now. I feel I lost my autobiographical memories approximately sometime in 2004 following medical procedure. To clarify, I feel I recall my childhood until approximately to age 16 or 17. For several years, nobody believed me, told to see a therapist, I mentally blocking. I wasn’t able to work anymore in the medical profession, in fact, spent over an hour driving around the east bay one day unable to find the medical center I had worked at for ten years. I finally pulled my car over, parked and in disbelief cried and cried. Then I sustained a mild traumatic brain injury in 2008. This resulted in a multitude of cognitive deficits, vision and hearing difficulties along with major short term memory issues now along with the longterm memory loss. The first neurologist I saw dismissed me as I was fine just depressed. I felt often I was descending into insanity, the isolation was unbearable. But I persevered and finally was treated by a wonderful neurophycoloigist in Berkeley where I had been living at the time all this occurred. After several days of testing, he validated all I reported to him as to be true and he welcomed me into his Lifeskills program he facilitates. He explained I was able to info in but when I try to retrieve it most often not able. I was told I have delayed onset cognitive deficits, which has been the case. I had become dyslexic after the TBI but have since taught myself to reread, took almost a year, but still so much problems remembering what I do read, much less constantly inverting the words,etc. I was assured I didn’t loss my intellect, which has actually caused me so much grief, family, friends, acquaintances don’t believe what it takes to get thru a day, the extreme sense of loss I feel on so many levels, professionally, financially, my freedom(unable to drive anymore) much less the extreme memory loss. I don’t feel I fit in anywhere. I am told too often by many close to me that my memory loss isn’t really much, that I over react if I tear up or have upset feelings when I don’t recall something I think I should, that everybody forgets where their keys are, I need to just deal with it. Well I hang my keys up consistently. I don’t lforget where I put them, ” like everybody does”. It would be nice to remember something about my college graduation, the big road trip I took with a sister and two nieces through Yellowstone up to Canada across and down thru WA and Oregon. Recently made the mistake of saying would like to go to Yellowstone one day to see what it is like, to that sister, look of annoyance on her face when she pointed I have been there I must remember our trip. So hard to explain in that moment the humiliation I felt, as usual for again annoying a loved one by saying I don’t remember. I feel I live in a bubble, for a couple years now I try really hard around family members to act like I know what they may be referring to from the past that I don’t have a clue now. I look for life’s silver lining everyday, and express much gratitude for what I do have, but who am I when I can’t connect the dots of my past life. I am always looking for some kind of support group, but I don’t succeed. I feel so much grief from so much loss,yet grief support groups are for the loss of a loved one, when I inquire. There are amazing programs for veterans cropping up now for those who have also suffered a traumatic brain injury, thank goodness, so maybe down the road for those such as myself on the fringes of needing these programs too, it will come. That is what I hope for, if not for me but others that are sure to eventually follow lie me. With ever so much gratitude thanks for letting me express my issues concerning the importance of memory. Please excuse my spelling mistakes, I won the eighth grade spelling championship but that was then this now.