Sigmund Freud called it ‘the remarkable amnesia of childhood’1. When you ask people to recall their earliest experiences, they rarely report memories dating from much before about three years of age. Since Freud made his observations, the phenomenon of childhood amnesia has been the subject of much research and theorizing, with many different explanations put forward to explain this intriguing phenomenon. One possibility is that early experiences are not properly encoded, which means that they cannot be stored for later retrieval. The problem with this explanation is that we know from other research (and casual observation) that memory processes are functional in infancy and early childhood. The issue is not with children remembering things, but with them continuing to do so when they reach adulthood.
Why do adults suffer from this forgetfulness? One response might be that it’s not adults that we should be asking. Some recent studies have shown that, if you ask the question in childhood, you get an earlier point of ‘offset’ of childhood amnesia—that is, the respondents’ earliest memories seem to go back further. To test this idea out some more, Karen Tustin and Harlene Hayne at the University of Otago have taken a new approach to the subject. In their study, published in the last issue of Developmental Psychology2, they recruited four groups of participants: young children (age 5), older children (age 8-9), adolescents (age 12-13), and adults (age 18-20). There were twelve people in each group, with equal numbers of males and females. For each participant, the researchers created what they call a Timeline: a horizontal line depicting different years of the individual’s life, with photos of the participant attached at some of the ages…
i can feel this. all i can remember is peeing on somebody. and riding my bike.
and crying a bunch.
-
kcuhcttenneb liked this
-
wearehappyandfree reblogged this from psychotherapy
-
extraordinaryshe liked this
-
coracoidcommas liked this
-
jsaisnogner reblogged this from psychotherapy and added:
Wow, no wonder why I can’t remember my
-
the-sounds-of-breaking-hearts liked this
-
idaaxoxo liked this
-
idaaxoxo reblogged this from gravityhappens
-
gravityhappens reblogged this from psychotherapy
-
pursuingwonder reblogged this from psychotherapy and added:
THIS IS AWESOME :D
-
mortschoolconfidential liked this
-
saucyupstart reblogged this from psychotherapy
-
junglethoughts reblogged this from psychotherapy
-
philoslothy reblogged this from psychotherapy
-
channers reblogged this from icantgetanythingelse
-
esoreilla liked this
-
icantgetanythingelse reblogged this from psychotherapy
-
100073 liked this
-
keavyy reblogged this from psychotherapy
-
unfulfilledpassion reblogged this from psychotherapy
-
suchabeautifulthing liked this
-
hanalyze liked this
-
serendipity16 reblogged this from psychotherapy and added:
go out on a limb here and say that...could be because a 5 year old
-
iamthenikster reblogged this from psychotherapy and added:
This is really interesting...me. I have one memory...I’ve...
-
shes-stardust liked this
-
sumusquodsumus reblogged this from psychotherapy
-
angelsguidemehome liked this
-
seemsforever liked this
-
amorefoshore liked this
-
iamzhegypsy liked this
-
eunisaur liked this
-
heisenburger liked this
-
thereptiliancomplex liked this
-
ericalamity reblogged this from psychotherapy
-
anotherword liked this
-
econde88 reblogged this from psychotherapy
-
pitselly liked this
-
nikorette reblogged this from psychotherapy
-
ithoughtitclassic liked this
-
heyhope liked this
-
krysjill liked this
-
sn0wsicles liked this
-
irresponsiblephilosophy liked this
-
sapphireblues liked this
-
rainecaphriel reblogged this from psychotherapy
-
kireinahana reblogged this from psychotherapy
-
beautyandthebeast liked this
-
shitilikey reblogged this from psychotherapy
-
misterandre liked this
-
elevenpixels liked this
- Show more notes