Memory lane The perfectly imperfect ways we remember

Ciara Greene, 1982-

Book - 2025

"Making Memories describes the science of how memories are constructed and reconstructed, revealing how this process of making (and remaking) memories - which has strengths, but also introduces vulnerabilities - is central to the formation of our identities. Rather than retrieving memories fully formed from long-term storage, memories are reconstructed every time we attempt to recall them. The way in which memories are reconstructed can lead to errors and distortions and even to entirely false memories. The authors describe the consequences of these memory errors, including faulty eyewitness identifications and susceptibility to misinformation. Greene and Murphy also discuss the effects of memory distortion in our lives, both negative ...and positive. The downsides of memory distortions are considerable; however, the authors make the point that they arise not as some anomaly or failure of evolution but rather as a by-product of a "perfectly imperfect" process that evolved to solve problems in our ancestral environment. These "flaws" are perhaps better thought of as "features," as they help to make us who we are and enable us to go about our lives and make sense of our experiences. The problems arise when we have unrealistic expectations of our memories - for example, if we expect them to record our experiences like a video camera, perfectly preserving the past, which they do not"--

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Subjects
Published
Princeton : Princeton University Press [2025]
Language
English
Main Author
Ciara Greene, 1982- (author)
Other Authors
Gillian Murphy, 1990- (author)
Physical Description
ix, 234 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780691257099
  • Acknowledgements
  • 1. What's This Book About?
  • 2. What Is Memory?
  • 3. Why Is It Good to Forget?
  • 4. Why Are We Not Better Eyewitnesses?
  • 5. Why Does New Information Sometimes Change Our Memories of the Past?
  • 6. Why Do We Build Entirely False Memories?
  • 7. Who Is Susceptible to False Memories?
  • 8. How Does Emotion Affect Our Memories?
  • 9. How Do Our Memories Function in a Digital World?
  • 10. How Do Our Flawed Memories Affect Our Behaviour?
  • 11. Is It Ethical to Question and Manipulate Memory?
  • 12. SoNowWhat?
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Greene and Murphy--psychology professors at University College Dublin and University College Cork, respectively--explore the fragility of memory in this insightful debut survey. They explain that memories take the form of synaptic connections in the brain's hippocampus and describe the case of Henry Molaison, who lost his ability to form new memories after doctors removed his hippocampus in an effort to treat his epileptic seizures. Arguing that "forgetting is necessary and important," the authors present as a cautionary tale the case of Jill Price, whose "highly superior autobiographical memory" enables her to recall events from her life with astonishing accuracy (given a particular date, she can "recite what day of the week it fell on, what she did on that day, and who she was with") but leaves her feeling overwhelmed by a constant barrage of irrelevant recollections. Memory is also highly malleable, the authors contend, detailing how in the 1980s, suggestive interviewing techniques by prosecutors coaxed children at a California preschool into falsely remembering sexual abuse at the hands of school staff. The authors make a persuasive argument that forgetting has its benefits, even as the fascinating case studies show the many downsides of memory's fallibility. Pop science readers will want to check out this splendid study. (Mar.)

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