Date: May 19, 2014
"Memory 'works a little bit more like a Wikipedia page,' Loftus said in a recent speech. 'You can go in there and change it, but so can other people.'"
preview | full record— Specter, Michael (b. 1955)
Date: May 19, 2014
"If misinformation can be incorporated so seamlessly into a person's recollection of an event, what becomes of the original memory? Is it completely overwritten, or merely adjusted somehow, layered with a new trace?"
preview | full record— Specter, Michael (b. 1955)
Date: May 19, 2014
"I asked if she thought scientists would ever really be able to write the pain out of a patient's mind."
preview | full record— Specter, Michael (b. 1955)
Date: September 1, 2014
"Lakoff argues that the brain understands sentences not just by analyzing syntax and looking up neural dictionaries, but also by igniting its memories of kicking and picking up."
preview | full record— Chorost, Michael (b. 1964)
Date: December 10, 2017
"Writing to Wilhelm Fleiss in 1896, Freud used the word Nachträglichkeit --'retranscription'--to describe the brain's action of calling up a memory and revising it in response to fresh circumstances."
preview | full record— Krauss, Nicole (b. August 18, 1974)
Date: May 28, 2023
"It's like we have an internal whiteboard in our minds ... If I'm working on one task, I have all the info I need on that mental whiteboard. Then I switch to email. I have to mentally erase that whiteboard and write all the information I need to do email."
preview | full record— Klein, Ezra (b. May 9, 1984)
Date: May 28, 2023
"And just like on a real whiteboard, there can be a residue in our minds."
preview | full record— Klein, Ezra (b. May 9, 1984)