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How Memory Works and Why Your Brain Remembers Wrong

In 12 lectures presented by an expert in developmental psychology, discover why our memories are so often faulty—and why that’s a feature rather than a failure.
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Overview

In How Memory Works and Why Your Brain Remembers Wrong, learn why everything you experience in this life is an interpretation of signals received, assembled, and reassembled by your brain. That pliability—and even unreliability—of your memory is no accident. Yes, you hate it when you can’t remember where you put your car keys. But through this course, you’ll come to realize that each of the obvious negatives of your memory has a flip side that supports your ability to survive and thrive.

About

Gabrielle F. Principe

Human memory is a process—a process situated in a dynamic and changing environment, moving across time, constantly updating our memories to serve us well in the current moment in order to help us thrive.

INSTITUTION

College of Charleston
Gabrielle F. Principe is a Professor of Psychology at the College of Charleston. She received her PhD in Developmental Psychology from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and later completed a postdoctoral fellowship at Cornell University. She has published her research in numerous scientific journals, including Psychological Science, the Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, and the Journal of Cognition and Development. She is also the author of the book Your Brain on Childhood: The Unexpected Side Effects of Classrooms, Ballparks, Family Rooms, and the Minivan.

By This Professor

How Memory Works and Why Your Brain Remembers Wrong
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How Memory Works and Why Your Brain Remembers Wrong

Trailer

The Surprising Pliability of Memory

01: The Surprising Pliability of Memory

In 2012, six eyewitnesses helped convict Lydell Grant of first-degree murder. But Grant was not guilty of the crime and was eventually exonerated. Was this a conspiracy? Were all six witnesses knowingly lying? Discover the slippery, shape-shifting nature of human memory and how it can fool even the most honest and well-meaning among us.

28 min
Context: The Connective Tissue of Memory

02: Context: The Connective Tissue of Memory

Our experiences are stored as patterns of electricity. When that same pattern is repeated, it gives us the feeling of the experience again, what we recognize as a memory. Learn how the context of that original experience affects our memory of it, and why context-driven memory is crucial to our survival.

32 min
Expectation, Perception, and Memory

03: Expectation, Perception, and Memory

Is it possible that everything you’ve ever seen, heard, smelled, or tasted is just an illusion? Actually, it’s not only possible—it’s true. Your perceptions are simply the information your brain has decided to give you. Explore how your brain uses your memories to construct the seamless experience you know as your life.

29 min
Attention: You Remember What You Notice

04: Attention: You Remember What You Notice

Have you ever misplaced your phone and spent precious moments of your life trying to find it? Of course—we all have. It simply means you weren’t paying attention when you put your phone down. Learn why attention is called the glue between experience and memory. If you’re not paying attention to that particular action, then it simply doesn’t exist for you. Not in memory. Not anywhere.

27 min
False Memory: Remembering What Didn’t Happen

05: False Memory: Remembering What Didn’t Happen

Have you ever had a false memory? Chances are your romantic partner thinks you have—or your boss, mother, or child. Because even though you know a certain event happened in a particular way, they remember a completely different scenario. Explore the many different factors that work to impair your memory of any important situation.

30 min
How Biases Distort What We Remember

06: How Biases Distort What We Remember

Dig into the many types of biases that can distort how we remember events, beliefs, and even ourselves. Biases of hindsight, availability, egocentrism, consistency, and more can cause us to edit or rewrite our previous experiences, unknowingly and unconsciously. And what about stereotype bias? You might be surprised to learn that it’s not all negative.

31 min
The Repressed Memory Wars

07: The Repressed Memory Wars

Learn about the murder case that launched what’s become known as the “memory wars”—a still-ongoing divide between professionals—and what modern science has to say about the notion of repressed memories. Can a person “remember” an event that can be proven to never have happened? Absolutely. Thanks to the misinformation effect, it happens all the time.

31 min
Things You’ll Forget and Why

08: Things You’ll Forget and Why

We all forget things all the time, right? What’s wrong with us, and what do these memory lapses say about our character, our trustworthiness, our intelligence? Absolutely nothing, as it turns out. Discover why forgetting is, actually, a vital, adaptive feature of our brain. Get some important tips to help you better deal with its downside.

28 min
Memories of Emotional Experiences

09: Memories of Emotional Experiences

In addition to our many mundane memories, each of us also has memories of significant emotional experiences, such as the birth of a child or a major global event. Learn about your body’s HPA axis, how it functions in the creation and recovery of intense emotional memories, and its relationship to PTSD and its treatment.

29 min
Changing Your Memories on Purpose

10: Changing Your Memories on Purpose

Previously, you’ve learned that scientists can be successful at implanting false memories. But what if scientists worked with similar memory modification techniques to improve your life, lessen pain, or allow PTSD sufferers to function better? Learn about the fascinating work known as reconsolidation therapy and the related drugs that can affect memory.

27 min
Memory, Evidence, and the Law

11: Memory, Evidence, and the Law

Can children be relied upon to give accurate, truthful reports about events when it comes to legal matters? Some questioning techniques are obviously meant to lead children to a specific conclusion—often with dire results for the alleged perpetrators. But you’ll be surprised to learn how easy it is for adults to influence children’s memories even without intending to.

30 min
The Virtues of Misremembering

12: The Virtues of Misremembering

When you consider how constantly memory errors shape and reshape our lives, it seems highly unlikely that these errors are simply a “bug” in the memory system that has evolved over hundreds of millions of years. Explore three ways in which our very flexible and malleable memories help us move forward in our lives better than a photographic memory ever could.

29 min

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