Page 56 - Use Your Memory
P. 56

USE  YOUR  MEMORY
 is that we do not so much remember as gradually forget. Encom-
 passing this idea is the duplex theory of remembering and forget-
 ting, which states that there are two different kinds of information
 retention:  long-term  and  short-term.  For  example,  you  have
 probably experienced a different 'feeling' in the way that you recall
 a telephone  number that has  just been  given to you  and the  way
 that  you  recall  your  own  telephone  number.  The  short-term
 situation is one  in which the idea is 'in' the brain but has not yet
 been properly  coded  and  is  therefore  more  readily  forgotten.  In
 the long-term situation the idea has been completely coded,  filed
 and  stored,  and it will probably remain there  for years,  if not  for
 life.
 Research  into  direct  brain  stimulation  was  initiated  by  Dr
 Wilder  Penfield.  In  more  detail:  when  performing  craniotomies
 (removal  of  a  small  section  of  the  brain)  in  order  to  reduce
 epileptic attacks, Penfield had first to remove a portion of the skull
 lying over the  side  of the  brain.  Before  operating,  Penfield con-
 ducted  a  systematic  electrical  stimulation  of the  open brain,  and
 the  patient,  who  remained  conscious,  reported  his  experience
 after  each  stimulation.  In  an  early  case  Penfield  stimulated  the
 temporal lobe  of the brain,  and the patient reported  a re-created
 memory of a childhood  experience.
 Penfield  found  that  stimulating  various  areas  of  the  cortex
 produces  a  range  of responses  but  that  only  stimulation  of the
 temporal  lobes  leads  to  reports  of  meaningful  and  integrated
 experiences. These  experiences  are  often complete  in that when
 re-created  they  include  the  colour,  sound,  movement  and
 emotional content of the  original  experiences.
 Of particular interest in these studies is the fact that some of the
 memories stimulated electrically by Penfield had been unavailable
 in normal recall.  In addition, the stimulated experiences seemed
 to be far more specific and accurate than normal conscious recall,
 which tends to be a generalisation. It was Penfield's belief that the
 brain records  every item to which it pays conscious attention and
 that this record is basically permanent, although it may be 'forgot-
 ten' in day-to-day living.
 More  recently,  theorists have returned to  a position  similar to
 that of Flourens, in which they are suggesting that every part of the
 brain may include all memories. This model is based on hologra-
 phic  photography.  In  simple  terms,  a  holographic  photographic
 plate is  simply a piece of glass, which, when two laser beams are
 passed through it at the right angle, reproduces a ghostly, three-
 dimensional  photograph.  One  of the  amazing  things  about  this
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