Brain Rules (Updated and Expanded)



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Brain Rules (Updated and Expand - John Medina

every time I retrieve it
. This process is formally termed
reconsolidation. As you can imagine, many scientists now question the
entire notion of stability in human memory. If consolidation is not a
sequential one-time event but an event that occurs every time a memory
trace is reactivated, it means permanent storage exists in our brains only for
those memories we choose not to recall! If this is true, the case I am about
to make for repetition in learning is ridiculously important.
Retrieving memories: libraries and detectives
Like working memory, we appear to have different forms of long-term
memory, most of which interact with one another. Unlike working memory,
there is not as much agreement as to what those forms are. Most researchers
believe we have semantic memory systems, in charge of remembering
things like your sister’s favorite dress or your weight in high school. Most
believe there is episodic memory, in charge of remembering “episodes” of
past experiences, complete with characters, plots, and time stamps—like
your five-year high school reunion. Autobiographical memory, a subset of
episodic memory, features a familiar protagonist: you.
How do we retrieve such memories? Two ways, researchers think. One
model passively imagines libraries. The other aggressively imagines crime
scenes.
In the library model, memories are stored in our heads the same way
books are stored in a library. Retrieval begins with a command to browse
through the stacks and select a specific volume. Once selected, the contents
of the volume are brought into conscious awareness and read like a book.
The memory is retrieved. This is the model we use soon after learning
something (within minutes, hours, or days). In these cases, we are able to
reproduce a fairly specific and detailed account of a given memory.
But as time goes by, and once-clear details fade, we switch to the
second model. This model imagines our memories to be more like a large
collection of crime scenes, complete with their own Sherlock Holmes.
Retrieval begins by summoning the detective to a particular crime scene,
full of fragments of data. Mr. Holmes examines the partial evidence
available, and he invents a reconstruction of what was actually stored. The


brain’s Sherlock Holmes, however, isn’t afraid to use a little imagination. In
an attempt to fill in missing gaps, the brain relies on fragments, inferences,
guesswork, and often—disturbingly—memories not even related to the
actual event.
Why would the brain insert false information as it tries to reconstruct a
memory? It stems from a desire to create organization out of a bewildering
and confusing world. Here’s what is happening: The brain constantly
receives new inputs. It needs to store some of them in the same places
already occupied by previous experiences. Trained in pattern matching, the
brain connects new information to previously encountered information, in
an attempt to make sense of the world. Accessing that previous information
returns it to an amendable form. The new information resculpts the old.
And the brain then sends the re-created whole back for new storage. What
does this mean? Merely that present knowledge can bleed into past
memories and become intertwined with them as if they were encountered
together. Does that give you only an approximate view of reality? You bet it
does.
Psychiatrist Daniel Offer demonstrated how faulty our Sherlock Holmes
style of retrieval can be. If you had been one of his study subjects as a high-
school freshman, Offer would have asked you to answer some questions
that are really none of his business. Was religion helpful to you growing up?
Did you receive physical punishment as discipline? Did your parents
encourage you to be active in sports? And so on. Thirty-four years would
go by. Offer then tracks you down and gives you the same questionnaire.
Unbeknownst to you, he still has the answers you gave in high school, and
he is out to compare your answers. How well do you do?
Horribly. Take the question about physical punishment, for example.
Offer found that a third of the adults in his study recalled any physical
punishment, such as spanking, as a kid. Yet nearly 90 percent of them had
answered the question in the affirmative as adolescents.
Repetition fixes memories
Is there any hope of creating reliable long-term memories? As our Brain
Rule—Repeat to remember—cheerily suggests, the answer is yes. Memory


may not be fixed at the moment of learning, but repetition, doled out in
specifically timed intervals, is the fixative.
Here’s a test for you. Gaze at the following list of characters for about
30 seconds, then cover it up before you continue reading.
3 $ 8 ? A % 9
Can you recall the characters in the list without looking at them? Were
you able to do it without internally rehearsing them? Don’t be alarmed if
you couldn’t. The typical human brain can hold about seven pieces of new
information for less than 30 seconds! If something does not happen in that
short stretch of time, the information becomes lost. If you want to extend
the 30 seconds to, say, a few minutes, or even an hour or two, you will need
to consistently reexpose yourself to the information. This type of repetition
is sometimes called maintenance rehearsal. It is good for keeping things in
working memory—that is, for a short period of time. But there is a better
way to push information into long-term memory. To describe it, I would
like to relate the first time I ever saw somebody die.
Actually, I saw eight people die. The son of a career Air Force official, I
was very used to seeing military airplanes in the sky. But I looked up one
afternoon to see a cargo plane do something I had never seen before or
since. It was falling from the sky, locked in a dead man’s spiral. It hit the
ground less than a thousand feet from where I stood, and I felt both the
shock wave and the heat of the explosion. There are two things I could have
done with this information. I could have kept it to myself, or I could have
told the world. I chose the latter. After immediately rushing home to tell my
parents, I called some of my friends. We met for sodas and began talking
about what had just happened. The sounds of the engine cutting out. Our
surprise. Our fear. As horrible as the accident was, we talked about it so
much in the next week that the subject got tiresome. One of my teachers
actually forbade us from bringing it up during class time, threatening to
make T-shirts saying, “You’ve done enough talking.”
Why do I still remember the details of this story? Because of my
eagerness to yap about the experience. The gabfest after the accident forced
a consistent reexposure to the basic facts, followed by a detailed elaboration
of our impressions. This is called elaborative rehearsal, and it’s the type of


repetition most effective for the most robust retrieval. A great deal of
research shows that thinking or talking about an event 

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