Each time you recall an event, your brain distorts it.
September 19, 2012 | by Marla Paul
CHICAGO --- Remember the telephone game where people take
turns whispering a message into the ear of the next person in line? By the time
the last person speaks it out loud, the message has radically changed. It’s
been altered with each retelling.
Turns out your memory is a lot like the telephone game,
according to a new Northwestern Medicine study.
Every time you remember an event from the past, your brain
networks change in ways that can alter the later recall of the event. Thus, the
next time you remember it, you might recall not the original event but what you
remembered the previous time. The Northwestern study is the first to show this.
“A memory is not simply an image produced by time traveling
back to the original event -- it can be an image that is somewhat distorted
because of the prior times you remembered it,” said Donna Bridge, a
postdoctoral fellow at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and
lead author of the paper on the study recently published in the Journal of
Neuroscience. “Your memory of an event can grow less precise even to the point
of being totally false with each retrieval.”
Bridge did the research while she was a doctoral student in
lab of Ken Paller, a professor of psychology at Northwestern in the Weinberg
College of Arts and Sciences.
The findings have implications for witnesses giving
testimony in criminal trials, Bridge noted.
“Maybe a witness remembers something fairly accurately the
first time because his memories aren’t that distorted,” she said. “After that
it keeps going downhill.”
The published study reports on Bridge’s work with 12
participants, but she has run several variations of the study with a total of
70 people. “Every single person has shown this effect,” she said. “It’s really
huge.”
“When someone tells me they are sure they remember exactly
the way something happened, I just laugh,” Bridge said.
The reason for the distortion, Bridge said, is the fact that
human memories are always adapting.
“Memories aren’t static,” she noted. “If you remember
something in the context of a new environment and time, or if you are even in a
different mood, your memories might integrate the new information.”
For the study, people were asked to recall the location of
objects on a grid in three sessions over three consecutive days. On the first
day during a two-hour session, participants learned a series of 180 unique
object-location associations on a computer screen. The next day in session two,
participants were given a recall test in which they viewed a subset of those
objects individually in a central location on the grid and were asked to move
them to their original location. Then the following day in session three,
participants returned for a final recall test.
The results showed improved recall accuracy on the final
test for objects that were tested on day two compared to those not tested on
day two. However, people never recalled exactly the right location. Most
importantly, in session three they tended to place the object closer to the
incorrect location they recalled during day two rather than the correct
location from day one.
“Our findings show that incorrect recollection of the
object’s location on day two influenced how people remembered the object’s location
on day three,” Bridge explained. “Retrieving the memory didn’t simply reinforce
the original association. Rather, it altered memory storage to reinforce the
location that was recalled at session two.”
Bridge’s findings also were supported when she measured
participants’ neural signals --the electrical activity of the brain -- during
session two. She wanted to see if the neural signals during session two
predicted anything about how people remembered the object’s location during
session three.
The results revealed a particular electrical signal when
people were recalling an object location during session two. This signal was
greater when -- the next day -- the object was placed close to that location
recalled during session two. When the electrical signal was weaker, recall of
the object location was likely to be less distorted.
“The strong signal seems to indicate that a new memory was
being laid down,” Bridge said, “and the new memory caused a bias to make the
same mistake again.”
“This study shows how memories normally change over time,
sometimes becoming distorted,” Paller noted. “When you think back to an event
that happened to you long ago -- say your first day at school -- you actually
may be recalling information you retrieved about that event at some later time,
not the original event.”
The research was supported by National Science Foundation
grant BCS1025697 and National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke of
the National Institutes of Health grant T32 NS047987.
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