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  1. The fragile memory. Do you and your brother have different recollections of who knocked over the Christmas tree when the cat ran away and the Christmas porridge got burnt? Perhaps you are both wrong. That is the claim of researchers who study how we remember our lives. Illustration: Amanda Berglund.

  2. Jun 22, 2018 · Memory is fragile. Memory ends at the present moment. It is everything you have lived, experienced, seen, and felt up until this instant. Everyone holds their own set of memories. Sometimes...

    • It is impossible to recall your first few years… but many believe they can. “I presume that my readers do not at all remember, or remember only very vaguely, that highly important period of their existence which anteceded their birth and which transpired in their mother’s womb,” wrote Salvador Dali in his memoir.
    • Your memory can depend on your temperature. Psychologists say that human memory is ‘context-dependent’. To understand what that means, consider an experiment that asked some participants to stick their hands in a bucket of ice water – a considerably uncomfortable experience – and then memorise a list of words.
    • Your mental timeline is warped. Take a moment to guess the month and year when the following events occurred: (a) Michael Jackson’s death. (b) The release of Beyoncé's album Lemonade.
    • There is a benefit to vague memories… Try to draw a picture of your best friend from memory. Or, without looking at a photo, describe them in as much detail as you possibly can.
  3. Mar 12, 2012 · Hidden Motives. Unreliable Memory. Why memory's unreliable, and what we can do about it. Posted March 12, 2012|Reviewed by Ekua Hagan. Key points. Neuroscientists have shown that each time we...

  4. Oct 9, 2013 · The memory of traumatic events plague many lives and can even lead to psychiatric illness. The new understanding of memories means they can be “updated.”

  5. Memory is fragile because we are subject to forgetting and memory is not always as accurate as we would like to believe. Memory is powerful because most of the time it serves us well, forming the foundation of our knowledge of the world and of ourselves.

  6. The fragility of source memory explains why, in a famous experiment by psychologist John Neisser, John Dean's testimony about Richard Nixon was shown to be both incredibly accurate and hugely...