How New Memories Enhance Old Ones | Memory & Neuroscience

Sujata ⁤Gupta 2025-09-25 15:00:00

Chenyang (Leo) Lin grew up in a coastal city in southern China, far from any woods. So, when he went on a hike in New Hampshire last year,‍ he was awed by the large trees and darting squirrels. “That was very new to me,” says Lin, a brain and behavior expert at Boston University.

That hike is now crystallized in Lin’s memory. So, oddly,⁤ are the more familiar chickens ⁢he saw en route to the hike.

Now, Lin’s research helps explain⁢ why both those chickens and⁢ squirrels have lodged ⁣in his memory.⁣ Events that pack an emotional punch help people remember moments they would ‍otherwise forget, Lin and colleagues report September ⁣24 in Science Advances. The brain even seems to tether similar objects and events. that’s probably why Lin⁣ remembers mundane farm animals along with those super cool squirrels.

Understanding what people remember — and forget — ⁤could help students retain information or therapists treat ⁤trauma patients,⁣ Lin says.

Since the ⁣1990s, research has suggested that pairing a weak memory with a strong one can ⁤make the weak memory ⁣stick around. The idea behind that theory, known ⁤as tag and capture, is that everyday memories leave ⁣neuronal marks, or tags, that disappear within⁢ a few hours. But when a more powerful memory‍ occurs shortly after the everyday event, it ⁤triggers a localized⁣ protein storm in the hippocampus and ‍related‍ neural circuits. The tagged neurons can capture those proteins, thereby gluing weak memories to powerful ones.

Lin and his⁣ team tested that idea by having over 100⁢ people observe sequences of animals,⁢ such as aardvarks, hamsters or sea stars, and ⁤everyday tools on a computer.⁤ First, participants ‍simply viewed dozens of images. Next, they viewed⁢ similar images, but this time‍ with a reward attached to each. About half the participants received a large reward for labeling animals ‍and a low reward for⁣ labeling tools, while the other half received the opposite. For instance, a participant might receive 900 points for identifying a hamster as an animal and 1 point for identifying a hammer ⁣as a tool, or vice versa.

The next day, the team surprised participants with ⁢a memory test of what they’d seen the day before. Both reward size and image category type mattered, the researchers ⁤found. Receiving a big reward⁢ after seeing animals⁣ enhanced people’s memories of those animals by roughly ⁣5‍ percent. Those who received⁤ a small reward remembered about 45 percent of the animals they’d‍ seen in the first round, while those who received a large⁣ reward remembered about 50 percent⁤ of the corresponding animals.

Big rewards given right after seeing tools didn’t help people remember tools they’d seen in earlier stages. ⁢Lin suspects that’s because people formed stronger initial memories ⁣of the tools than the animals even without memory-boosting rewards. Rewards tied to images of⁤ animals had no effect on‍ peoples’ ability to remember⁣ wich tools they’d seen.

Mundane memories are known to exist in this transient state,‍ says cognitive⁤ neuroscientist Joseph Dunsmoor of The University of Texas at Austin. But‍ this is among the first papers to show that weak memories are more likely to get captured ⁤when they relate to the strong memory.  “The ‍thing that occurred in the past suddenly takes on more meaning,”⁢ says Dunsmoor, who ⁣has done similar research himself.

Lin’s team also showed that people were⁣ better at forming new memories ⁢after receiving a big reward. After a big event, the brain is aroused and open to new information, so those memories stick ⁣around,‍ Lin says.

Sorting ⁣out what’s going on in the brain while memories form will take more ⁤time.Someday,⁤ therapists ⁤could help ⁢survivors enhance⁣ the everyday memories that occurred before a trauma to dull the pain of what came after, Lin says.Or teachers could identify strategies that bolster students’ information retention: If Susie jumps up and down in a math word problem, maybe⁢ the class ‍ought to jump up and down, too.

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