Our ability to  remember forms the basis of who we are and is a psychological trick that  fascinates cognitive scientists. But how reliable are our memories?                                                               
 
http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2012/jan/13/our-memories-tell-our-story 
Memory is our past and future. To know who you are as a person,  you need to have some idea of who you have been. And, for better or  worse, your remembered life story is a pretty good guide to what you  will do tomorrow. "Our memory is our coherence," wrote the surrealist  Spanish-born film-maker, Luis Buñuel, "our reason, our feeling, even our  action." Lose your memory and you lose a basic connection with who you  are.
It's no surprise, then, that there is fascination with this  quintessentially human ability. When I cast back to an event from my  past – let's say the first time I ever swam backstroke unaided in the  sea – I don't just conjure up dates and times and places (what  psychologists call "semantic memory"). I do much more than that. I am  somehow able to reconstruct the moment in some of its sensory detail,  and relive it, as it were, from the inside. I am back there, amid the  sights and sounds and seaside smells. I become a time traveller who can  return to the present as soon as the demands of "now" intervene.
This  is quite a trick, psychologically speaking, and it has made cognitive  scientists determined to find out how it is done. The sort of memory I  have described is known as "autobiographical memory", because it is  about the narrative we make from the happenings of our own lives. It is  distinguished from semantic memory, which is memory for facts, and other  kinds of implicit long-term memory, such as your memory for complex  actions such as riding a bike or playing a saxophone.
When you ask  people about their memories, they often talk as though they were  material possessions, enduring representations of the past to be  carefully guarded and deeply cherished. But this view of memory is quite  wrong. Memories are not filed away in the brain like so many video  cassettes, to be slotted in and played when it's time to recall the  past. Sci-fi and fantasy fictions might try to persuade us otherwise,  but memories are not discrete entities that can be taken out of one  person's head, Dumbledore-style, and distilled for someone else's  viewing. They are mental reconstructions, nifty multimedia collages of  how things were, that are shaped by how things are now. Autobiographical  memories are stitched together as and when they are needed from  information stored in many different neural systems. That makes them  curiously susceptible to distortion, and often not nearly as reliable as  we would like.
We know this from many different sources of  evidence. Psychologists have conducted studies on eyewitness testimony,  for example, showing how easy it is to change someone's memories by  asking misleading questions. If the experimental conditions are set up  correctly, it turns out to be rather simple to give people memories for  events that never actually happened. These recollections can often be  very vivid, as in the case of a study by Kim Wade at the University of  Warwick. She colluded with the parents of her student participants to  get photos from the undergraduates' childhoods, and to ascertain whether  certain events, such as a ride in a hot-air balloon, had ever happened.  She then doctored some of the images to show the participant's  childhood face in one of these never-experienced contexts, such as the  basket of a hot-air balloon in flight. Two weeks after they were shown  the pictures, about half of the participants "remembered" the childhood  balloon ride, producing some strikingly vivid descriptions, and many  showed surprise when they heard that the event had never occurred. In  the realms of memory, the fact that it is vivid doesn't guarantee that  it really happened.
Even highly emotional memories are susceptible  to distortion. The term "flashbulb memory" describes those  exceptionally vivid memories of momentous events that seem burned in by  the fierce emotions they invoke. In the aftermath of the terrorist  attacks of 9/11, a consortium of researchers mobilised to gather  people's stories about how they heard the news. When followed up three  years later, almost half of the testimonies had changed in at least one  key detail. For example, people would remember hearing the news from the  TV, when actually they initially told the researchers that they had  heard it through word of mouth.
What accounts for this  unreliability? One factor must be that remembering is always  re-remembering. If I think back to how I heard the awful news about 9/11  (climbing out of a swimming pool in Spain), I know that I am not  remembering the event so much as my last act of remembering it. Like a  game of Chinese whispers, any small error is likely to be propagated  along the chain of remembering. The sensory impressions that I took from  the event are likely to be stored quite accurately. It is the assembly –  the resulting edit – that might not bear much resemblance to how things  actually were.
When we look at how memories are constructed by  the brain, the unreliability of memory makes perfect sense. In  storyboarding an autobiographical memory, the brain combines fragments  of sensory memory with a more abstract knowledge about events, and  reassembles them according to the demands of the present. The memory  researcher Martin Conway has described how two forces go head to head in  remembering. The force of correspondence tries to keep memory true to  what actually happened, while the force of coherence ensures that the  emerging story fits in with the needs of the self, which often involves  portraying the ego in the best possible light.
One of the most  interesting writers on memory, Virginia Woolf, shows this process in  action. In her autobiographical essay, A Sketch of the Past, she tells  us that one of her earliest memories is of the pattern of flowers on her  mother's dress, seen close-up as she rested on her lap during a train  journey to St Ives. She initially links the memory to the outward  journey to Cornwall, noting that it is convenient to do so because it  points to what was actually her earliest memory: lying in bed in her St  Ives nursery listening to the sound of the sea. But Woolf also  acknowledges an inconvenient fact. The quality of the light in the  carriage suggests that it is evening, making it more likely that the  event happened on the journey back from St Ives to London. The force of  correspondence makes her want to stick to the facts; the force of  coherence wants to tell a good story.
How many more of our  memories are a story to suit the self? There can be no doubt that our  current emotions and beliefs shape the memories that we create. It is  hard to remember the political beliefs of our pasts, for example, when  so much has changed in the world and in ourselves. How many of us can  accurately recall the euphoria at Tony Blair's election in 1997? When  our present-day emotions change, so do our memories. Julian Barnes  describes this beautifully in his Booker-winning The Sense of an Ending,  when a shift in his protagonist Tony's feelings towards his former  lover's parents unlocks new memories of their relationship. "But what  if, even at a late stage, your emotions relating to those long-ago  events and people change? … I don't know if there's a scientific  explanation for this … All I can say is that it happened, and that it  astonished me."
Of all the memories we cherish, those from  childhood are possibly the most special. Few of us will have reliable  memories from before three or four years of age, and recollections from  before that time need to be treated with scepticism. When you think  about the special cognitive tricks involved in autobiographical memory,  it's perhaps no surprise that it takes a while for children to start  doing it right. Many factors seem to be critical in children's emergence  from childhood amnesia, including language and narrative abilities.  When we are able to encode our experience in words, it becomes much  easier to put it together into a memory. Intriguingly, though, the  boundary of childhood amnesia shifts as you get closer to it. As a  couple of recent studies have shown, if you ask children about what they  remember from infancy, they remember quite a bit further back than they  are likely to do as adults.
There are implications to the  unreliability of childhood memories. A recent report commissioned by the  British Psychological Society warned professionals working in the legal  system not to accept early memories (dating from before the age of  three) without corroborating evidence. One particular difficulty with  early memories is their susceptibility to contamination by visual  images, such as photographs and video. I'm sure that several of my  childhood memories are actually memories of seeing myself in photos.  When we look back into the past, we are always doing so through a prism  of intervening selves. That makes it all the more important for  psychologists studying memory to look for confirming evidence when  asking people to recall their pasts.
And yet these untrustworthy  memories are among the most cherished we have. Memories of childhood are  often made out to have a particular kind of authenticity; we think they  must be pure because we were cognitively so simple back then. We don't  associate the slipperiness of memory with the guilelessness of youth.  When you read descriptions of people's very early memories, you see that  they often function as myths of creation. Your first memory is special  because it represents the point when you started being who you are. In  Woolf's case, that moment in her bed in the St Ives nursery was the  moment she became a conscious being. "If life has a base that it stands  upon," she wrote, "if it is a bowl that one fills and fills and fills –  then my bowl without a doubt stands upon this memory."
What should  we do about this troublesome mental function? For one thing, I don't  think we should stop valuing it. Memory can lead us astray, but then it  is a machine with many moving parts, and consequently many things that  can go awry. Perhaps even that is the wrong way of looking at it. The  great pioneer of memory research, Daniel Schacter, has argued that, even  when it is failing, memory is doing exactly the thing it is supposed to  do. And that purpose is as much about looking into the future as it is  about looking into the past. There is only a limited evolutionary  advantage in being able to reminisce about what happened to you, but  there is a huge payoff in being able to use that information to work out  what is going to happen next. Similar neural systems seem to underpin  past-related and future-related thinking. Memory is endlessly creative,  and at one level it functions just as imagination does.
That's how  I think we should value memory: as a means for endlessly rewriting the  self. It's important not to push the analogy with storytelling too far,  but it's a valuable one. Writing about her novel, Wolf Hall, Hilary  Mantel has explained how she brought the protagonist Thomas Cromwell  alive for the reader by giving him vivid memories. When writers create  imaginary memories for their characters, they do a similar kind of thing  to what we all do when we make a memory. They weave together bits of  their own personal experience, emotions and sensory impressions and the  minutiae of specific contexts, and tailor them into a story by hanging  them on to a framework of historical fact. They do all that while making  them fit the needs of the narrative, serving the story as much as they  serve truth.
To emphasise its narrative nature is not to undermine  memory's value. It is simply to be realistic about this everyday  psychological miracle. If we can be more honest about memory's quirks,  we can get along with it better. When I think back to my first attempt  at solo swimming, it doesn't bother me that I have probably got some of  the details wrong. It might be a fiction, but it's my fiction, and I  treasure it. Memory is like that. It makes storytellers of us all.
• Charles Fernyhough  is a writer and psychologist. His book on autobiographical memory,  Pieces of Light: How we Imagine the Past and Remember the Future, is  published by Profile Books in July. You can pre-order it  here. He is the author of The Baby in the Mirror (Granta), a reader in psychology at Durham University and a faculty member of the School of Life. You can follow him on Twitter at @cfernyhough
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