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This article is original by Translational Medicine Network.
Please indicate the source for reprinting.
Author: Yun Introduction: Researchers believe that most adults have "childhood amnesia" and can't remember things about infants and young children
.
A study in New Zealand has shown that the earliest memory of a person may begin at the age of two
.
Researchers at Memorial University of Newfoundland have recently made new discoveries about the earliest memory
.
When did the earliest memory of a person begin? This question has been plagued by scientists, and there has been no definite answer! Some people only remember things after 5 years old, and some people only remember things after 3 years old, but some people can remember things before 1 year old, which makes the earliest memory without a precise range
.
Researchers believe that most adults have "childhood amnesia" and can't remember things in infants and young children
.
A study in New Zealand has shown that the earliest memory of a person may begin at the age of two
.
Hawking, the most famous "Frozen Man" in the world, said that his earliest memory was two and a half years old
.
He was standing in the nursery of Byron Palace School in Highgate, crying
.
All the children around are playing with what seems to be a very wonderful toy, and he wants to participate
.
He was only two and a half years old at the time and was put among strangers for the first time, so he felt scared
.
Recently, researchers from Memorial University of Newfoundland published a paper entitled "What is your earliest memory? It depends" in "Memory"
.
Research shows that, on average, the earliest memories people can recall can be traced back to when they were two and a half years old
.
The results of the study delayed the previous average age of earliest memories by a full year
.
The researchers conducted a 21-year study to reach this conclusion after reviewing the available data
.
“When a person’s earliest memory appears, it is a moving target, not a single static memory,” explains Dr.
Carole Peterson, a child amnesia expert and lead author from Memorial University of Newfoundland.
“So when asked When it comes to their earliest memories, many people provide not the earliest memories, but memory fragments selected from a potential memory pool
.
Moreover, we believe that people remember many things they did not realize since they were two years old
.
"There are two reasons for this: first, just ask them what their earliest memory is, and then ask them some other memories, they can easily remember earlier memories
.
Once you let them start reminding themselves, they start to recall earlier memories—sometimes even a full year ago, like opening the floodgates of memory
.
Second, we recorded the wrong dates in the early memories of these people
.
It turns out that people think they are older than their actual age in early memory
.
For more than 20 years, Dr.
Peterson has been engaged in memory research, with particular attention to the ability of children and adults to recall their early years
.
This latest study reviewed her 10 research articles on childhood amnesia, and then analyzed published and unpublished data collected in Dr.
Peterson's laboratory since 1999
.
There were 992 participants in the study, and then the memories of 697 participants were compared with the memories of their parents
.
Finally, research has shown that, as their parents have confirmed, the earliest memories of children appear before what they believe to be the earliest memories
.
For example, you remember that you first remembered when you were three and a half years old, when in fact you were only two and a half years old
.
In some studies reviewed by Peterson, when reviewing a study, the study conducted interviews two and eight years after children’s earliest memories.
They were able to recall the same memories, but in subsequent interviews, they gave A later age
.
"Eight years later, the age of the earliest memories given by many people is one year older
.
Therefore, as they grow older, children continue to change the age at which they think they have early memories
.
" Dr.
Peterson said
.
Dr.
Peterson believes this is due to memory "stretching"
.
When you see something that happened a long time ago, it's like looking at the camera
.
The farther the memory distance is, the closer the telescopic effect allows you to see
.
It turns out that they moved their earliest memories forward by one to three and a half years
.
But we found that this does not happen when the child remembers the event when he is four years old and older
.
After sorting out all the data, it clearly shows that people remember more childhood than they thought, and go back to farther places, and it is relatively easy to help them acquire these memories
.
When you look at a study, some things are not clear, but when you start one study after another and all come to the same conclusions, the conclusions of the study become very convincing
.
Dr.
Peterson pointed out that it is this lack of clarity that has led to the limitations of the study
.
In fact, this is true of all the research conducted in this subject area so far
.
"What is needed in the study of childhood amnesia is independently confirmed or recorded external dates.
These dates can be compared with the dates obtained by individuals, and it can also prevent the parents' memory information from being wrong and affecting the research conclusions
.
" Dr.
Peterson said
.
Dr.
Peterson is currently conducting research in her laboratory and elsewhere to further confirm the answer to this long-debated question
.
Reference materials: https:// Note: This article aims to introduce the progress of medical research and cannot be used as a reference for treatment options
.
If you need health guidance, please go to a regular hospital
.
Please indicate the source for reprinting.
Author: Yun Introduction: Researchers believe that most adults have "childhood amnesia" and can't remember things about infants and young children
.
A study in New Zealand has shown that the earliest memory of a person may begin at the age of two
.
Researchers at Memorial University of Newfoundland have recently made new discoveries about the earliest memory
.
When did the earliest memory of a person begin? This question has been plagued by scientists, and there has been no definite answer! Some people only remember things after 5 years old, and some people only remember things after 3 years old, but some people can remember things before 1 year old, which makes the earliest memory without a precise range
.
Researchers believe that most adults have "childhood amnesia" and can't remember things in infants and young children
.
A study in New Zealand has shown that the earliest memory of a person may begin at the age of two
.
Hawking, the most famous "Frozen Man" in the world, said that his earliest memory was two and a half years old
.
He was standing in the nursery of Byron Palace School in Highgate, crying
.
All the children around are playing with what seems to be a very wonderful toy, and he wants to participate
.
He was only two and a half years old at the time and was put among strangers for the first time, so he felt scared
.
Recently, researchers from Memorial University of Newfoundland published a paper entitled "What is your earliest memory? It depends" in "Memory"
.
Research shows that, on average, the earliest memories people can recall can be traced back to when they were two and a half years old
.
The results of the study delayed the previous average age of earliest memories by a full year
.
The researchers conducted a 21-year study to reach this conclusion after reviewing the available data
.
“When a person’s earliest memory appears, it is a moving target, not a single static memory,” explains Dr.
Carole Peterson, a child amnesia expert and lead author from Memorial University of Newfoundland.
“So when asked When it comes to their earliest memories, many people provide not the earliest memories, but memory fragments selected from a potential memory pool
.
Moreover, we believe that people remember many things they did not realize since they were two years old
.
"There are two reasons for this: first, just ask them what their earliest memory is, and then ask them some other memories, they can easily remember earlier memories
.
Once you let them start reminding themselves, they start to recall earlier memories—sometimes even a full year ago, like opening the floodgates of memory
.
Second, we recorded the wrong dates in the early memories of these people
.
It turns out that people think they are older than their actual age in early memory
.
For more than 20 years, Dr.
Peterson has been engaged in memory research, with particular attention to the ability of children and adults to recall their early years
.
This latest study reviewed her 10 research articles on childhood amnesia, and then analyzed published and unpublished data collected in Dr.
Peterson's laboratory since 1999
.
There were 992 participants in the study, and then the memories of 697 participants were compared with the memories of their parents
.
Finally, research has shown that, as their parents have confirmed, the earliest memories of children appear before what they believe to be the earliest memories
.
For example, you remember that you first remembered when you were three and a half years old, when in fact you were only two and a half years old
.
In some studies reviewed by Peterson, when reviewing a study, the study conducted interviews two and eight years after children’s earliest memories.
They were able to recall the same memories, but in subsequent interviews, they gave A later age
.
"Eight years later, the age of the earliest memories given by many people is one year older
.
Therefore, as they grow older, children continue to change the age at which they think they have early memories
.
" Dr.
Peterson said
.
Dr.
Peterson believes this is due to memory "stretching"
.
When you see something that happened a long time ago, it's like looking at the camera
.
The farther the memory distance is, the closer the telescopic effect allows you to see
.
It turns out that they moved their earliest memories forward by one to three and a half years
.
But we found that this does not happen when the child remembers the event when he is four years old and older
.
After sorting out all the data, it clearly shows that people remember more childhood than they thought, and go back to farther places, and it is relatively easy to help them acquire these memories
.
When you look at a study, some things are not clear, but when you start one study after another and all come to the same conclusions, the conclusions of the study become very convincing
.
Dr.
Peterson pointed out that it is this lack of clarity that has led to the limitations of the study
.
In fact, this is true of all the research conducted in this subject area so far
.
"What is needed in the study of childhood amnesia is independently confirmed or recorded external dates.
These dates can be compared with the dates obtained by individuals, and it can also prevent the parents' memory information from being wrong and affecting the research conclusions
.
" Dr.
Peterson said
.
Dr.
Peterson is currently conducting research in her laboratory and elsewhere to further confirm the answer to this long-debated question
.
Reference materials: https:// Note: This article aims to introduce the progress of medical research and cannot be used as a reference for treatment options
.
If you need health guidance, please go to a regular hospital
.