Nai F.

Determined. Motivated. Accomplished.

287 notes

I have some childhood memories from when I was about 3 or 4 years old, some good some bad. So, all you parents out there treating your kids wrong, proceed with caution because they might remember things as far back as 2 years old!
Lately, I can’t recall what I just learned! It all happened since I started going to Cal and doing late night cramming sessions…BLEH! F YOU STRESS & procrastination! I can’t even remember high school events unless I get a lot more details! Hmm, still pretty good with remembering names when I’m a little buzzed tho! :p

fuckyeahneuroscience:

How memories are stored and retrieved - Blanks For the Memories | WSJ
What’s Your Earliest Childhood Recollection? Scientists Delve Into Brain Circuitry for Answers

Why we remember some scenes from early childhood and forget others has long intrigued scientists—as well as parents striving to create happy memories for their kids. One of the biggest mysteries: why most people can’t seem to recall anything before age 3 or 4.
Now, researchers in Canada have demonstrated that some young children can remember events from even before age 2—but those memories are fragile, with many vanishing by about age 10, according to a study in the journal Child Development this month.

I have some childhood memories from when I was about 3 or 4 years old, some good some bad. So, all you parents out there treating your kids wrong, proceed with caution because they might remember things as far back as 2 years old!

Lately, I can’t recall what I just learned! It all happened since I started going to Cal and doing late night cramming sessions…BLEH! F YOU STRESS & procrastination! I can’t even remember high school events unless I get a lot more details! Hmm, still pretty good with remembering names when I’m a little buzzed tho! :p

fuckyeahneuroscience:

How memories are stored and retrieved - Blanks For the Memories | WSJ

What’s Your Earliest Childhood Recollection? Scientists Delve Into Brain Circuitry for Answers

Why we remember some scenes from early childhood and forget others has long intrigued scientists—as well as parents striving to create happy memories for their kids. One of the biggest mysteries: why most people can’t seem to recall anything before age 3 or 4.

Now, researchers in Canada have demonstrated that some young children can remember events from even before age 2—but those memories are fragile, with many vanishing by about age 10, according to a study in the journal Child Development this month.

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