Brain’s memory center stays active during ‘infantile amnesia’

#1
C C Offline
https://news.yale.edu/2021/05/21/brains-...le-amnesia

RELEASE: One trait shared by all humans is that they don’t remember specific life episodes that occurred before the age of 3 or 4. Many scientists have attributed this so-called “infantile amnesia” to a lack of development in the hippocampus, an area of the brain located in the temporal lobe that is crucial to encoding memory.

However, a new brain imaging study by Yale scientists shows that infants as young as three months are already enlisting the hippocampus to recognize and learn patterns. The findings were published May 21 in the journal Current Biology. “A fundamental mystery about human nature is that we remember almost nothing from birth through early childhood, yet we learn so much critical information during that time — our first language, how to walk, objects and foods, and social bonds,” said Nick Turk-Browne, a professor of psychology at Yale and senior author of the paper.

For the new study, the Yale team used a new functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) technology to capture activity in the hippocampus in 17 babies, aged three months to two years old, as they were presented two sets of images on a screen. One set of images appeared as a structured sequence containing hidden patterns that could be learned. In the other, images appeared in a random order that offered no opportunity for learning. After the babies were shown these two sets of images several times, the hippocampus responded more strongly to the structured image set than to the random image set.

What might be happening, Turk-Browne said, is that as a baby gains experience in the world, their brain searches for general patterns that help them understand and predict the surrounding environment. This happens even though the brain is not equipped to permanently store each individual experience about a specific moment in space and time – the hallmark of episodic memory that is also lost in adult amnesia.

The strategy makes sense because learning general knowledge — such as patterns of sounds that make up the words in a language — may be more important to a baby than remembering specific details, such as a single incident in which a particular word was uttered.

The size of the hippocampus doubles in the first two years of life and eventually develops connections necessary to store episodic memories, Turk-Browne said. “As these circuit changes occur, we eventually obtain the ability to store memories,” he said. “But our research shows that even if we can’t remember infant experiences later on in life, they are being recorded nevertheless in a way that allows us to learn from them.”

Yale’s Cameron Ellis is first author of the study, and this research was included in his recently completed and award-winning PhD dissertation.
Reply
#2
Syne Offline
So-called "infantile amnesia" works just like the vast majority of dreams people don't remember having. We just easily forget things we do not identify or associate with. In dreams, it's the non sequitur places and people that have no tangible relationship to our waking life. In infants, it's likely that an unawareness of personal identity results in just about everything being unrelated or dissociated.

Claiming that infant brains can't "permanently store each individual experience" is not evidenced by simply not remembering. Otherwise, not remembering some of our dreams would tend to mean that we were incapable of remembering any of them. As usual, they take a actual finding (brain imagining study) and then make baseless claims.
Reply


Possibly Related Threads…
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
  Research Scientists found that memory can happen outside the brain (elsewhere in the body) C C 1 209 Oct 14, 2025 08:16 PM
Last Post: Syne
  Research Map of 600,000 brain cells rewrites the textbook on how the brain makes decisions C C 1 371 Sep 6, 2025 10:44 AM
Last Post: confused2
  Research Why don’t we remember being a baby? + New rules for the game of memory C C 0 534 Mar 20, 2025 11:06 PM
Last Post: C C
  The magic of memory Magical Realist 0 414 Jan 14, 2025 10:03 PM
Last Post: Magical Realist
  A guide to active imagination Magical Realist 0 435 Aug 29, 2024 02:40 AM
Last Post: Magical Realist
  Research Singing from memory unlocks a surprisingly common musical superpower C C 0 436 Aug 15, 2024 03:37 AM
Last Post: C C
  Article What, if anything, makes mood fundamentally different from memory? C C 1 593 Apr 10, 2024 09:30 PM
Last Post: Magical Realist
  How loneliness reshapes the brain + Digital amnesia has been exaggerated C C 1 385 Mar 1, 2023 08:43 PM
Last Post: Magical Realist
  An ocean in your brain: Interacting brain waves key to how we process information C C 0 409 Apr 22, 2022 07:41 PM
Last Post: C C
  How our past shapes present + How highly processed foods harm memory in aging brain C C 0 327 Oct 18, 2021 02:31 AM
Last Post: C C



Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)