Have you ever run into a work colleague at the supermarket and failed to recognize them? Blame your brilliant, lazy brain.
A new study led by Assistant
Professor Oliver Baumann of Bond University sheds fresh light on the way the
body’s most complex organ captures memories.
Researchers looked
specifically at how the brain reacts when people encounter a person
or object out of context for the first time.
Dr. Baumann said that as we
have only ever seen the co-worker at the office, the memory system appears to
generate a snapshot that fuses the person and the office together.
“Our brain thinks that person
belongs in that room,” Dr. Baumann said.
“If you encounter them
somewhere else, that creates a problem in that you might not recognize them.
“That doesn’t happen once our
brain learns the person exists independently of the room. Second time, third
time around, our brain would not make that mistake again but encode the person
and the room separately.”
Dr. Baumann said the
phenomenon indicates our brains are “intrinsically efficient or almost lazy.”
“If we see a tree and it’s
linked to a forest then it may be efficient to assume that not all the
different trees and stones are separate entities but are coded as a unit.
“This ensures we are not
overloading our brain and wasting space and energy.
“It is only when it seems
beneficial to assume that an object or person could exist apart from
the background that our brain takes the effort to encode that as an independent
unit.”
In the study, students lying
in an MRI brain scanner were asked to memorize multiple images of objects (such
as a backpack, clock or cupcake) against backgrounds (including a gym,
laundromat and garden).
Half of the objects had been
shown to the students a day earlier. This made it possible to look at
differences in brain responses when objects were familiar or had been
encountered only once.
In the subsequent testing stage,
researchers swapped the backgrounds of some objects and found this led to
difficulty in remembering the unfamiliar objects.
The forgetfulness was
accompanied by changes in activity in the hippocampus, one of the core human
memory areas. Dr. Baumann said the findings provide insight into how our memory
system strives for efficiency and only encodes what it absolutely needs.
“Forgetting can be seen as a
feature because we shouldn’t encode more than we need and more is not always
better,” he said.
“People with Hyperthymesia
remember almost everything in their life and while that seems like a neat feat,
it comes with a downside because they have this huge mass of information
present and it becomes very difficult to focus on a task.
“Forgetting helps declutter our mental
space and it’s all about efficiency.”
Dr. Baumann said the research
could be a small step towards brain implants that restore memory.
“We have retinal
and cochlear implants now and maybe in 100, 200 years we could have
memory implants and be able to artificially interface our memory system,” he
said.
“This is one little building block in the endeavor to fully understand how
our memory system works.”
Article provided by Bond
University
Journal article: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.591231/full
Source: Forgetfulness
May Be a Sign of Brain Efficiency – Scents of Science (myfusimotors.com)
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