Letting go: Study shows that just like old photos, memories too fade over time

When people remember the past, they remember it with varying degrees of clarity.

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The vibrancy of low-level details - such as colours and shapes associated with an event - fade in memory while the gist of the experience is retained.
BOSTON: Like old photographs, the visual quality of our memories declines over time, according to a study.

When people remember the past, they remember it with varying degrees of clarity.

Sometimes people remember lots of details about an event, as if they are reliving the moment as it happened, said Maureen Ritchey, an assistant professor at Boston College in the US.


Other times, it seems like the memory has faded, and the details are fuzzy, according to the study published in the journal Psychological Science.

Previous research has shown that emotionally significant events - like a car accident - are remembered more vividly than everyday events.

"We wanted to know whether this feeling of memory vividness is related to not just what is remembered, but how it is remembered - the visual quality of the memory," Ritchey said in a statement.
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People may remember going to a music festival and watching their favourite band, but the intensity of that sensory experience, including the bright stage lights and strength of the bass, will slowly fade. (Representative image)

She said people reported changes to their memories akin to using a filter to edit a picture.

"A simple analogy is what happens when you post a photo on Instagram. You are cued to apply a filter that changes the brightness or colour saturation of the image," Ritchey said.

In three experiments, participants studied emotionally negative and neutral images that varied in visual quality -- luminance and colour saturation.

They then reconstructed the visual qualities of each image in a subsequent test.
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The findings revealed that memories were recollected as less visually vibrant than they were encoded, demonstrating a novel memory-fading effect, the researchers said.

Negative emotions subjects experienced when viewing the images increased the likelihood that images would be accurately remembered but did not influence memory fading.
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In addition, subjective ratings of memory vividness were lower for less accurate memories and for memories that had visually faded, the team found.

These findings provide evidence that the vibrancy of low-level details - such as colours and shapes associated with an event - fade in memory while the gist of the experience is retained.

People may remember going to a music festival and watching their favourite band, but the intensity of that sensory experience, including the bright stage lights and strength of the bass, will slowly fade.

"We found that memories seem to literally fade: people consistently remembered visual scenes as being less vibrant than they were originally experienced," said post-doctoral researcher Rose Cooper.

"We had expected that memories would get less accurate after a delay, but we did not expect that there would be this qualitative shift in the way that they were remembered," Cooper said.

The fading effect happened less for memories that were rated as subjectively stronger.

"We were also surprised to find that emotional memories did not influence the amount of fading, only the likelihood with which people remembered the images at all," she added.

Your Goldfish's Memory Lasts Longer Than 3 Seconds, & Other Facts About The Popular Pet
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An aquarium in Paris is allowing people to drop off unwanted goldfish at their facility, providing them with a second lease of life.

Here are some cool facts about these popular pet fish.

An aquarium in Paris is allowing people to drop off unwanted goldfish at their facility, providing them with a second lease of life. Here are some cool facts about these popular pet fish.

A goldfish’s taste buds are located on the inside surface of their mouth and externally around their lips — which are strong and mobile.

A goldfish’s taste buds are located on the inside surface of their mouth and externally around their lips — which are strong and mobile.

For every year of a goldfish’s life, it develops a ring on its scaly body, which determines its age. Though most of them don’t live for long, the oldest living goldfish are 40 years old.

For every year of a goldfish’s life, it develops a ring on its scaly body, which determines its age. Though most of them don’t live for long, the oldest living goldfish are 40 years old.

Human eyes can see only three primary colours: red, blue and yellow. All other colours are mixtures of these. A goldfish, however, can see four, making it a tetrachromate.

Human eyes can see only three primary colours: red, blue and yellow. All other colours are mixtures of these. A goldfish, however, can see four, making it a tetrachromate.

Most goldfish keepers will have heard the “fact” that goldfish memory spans are just three seconds long — but is it true? Scientists have proven that goldfish memory spans are nowhere near as short as three seconds. Your goldfish can actually remember things for at least five months.


(Text: Viandra D'souza)

Most goldfish keepers will have heard the “fact” that goldfish memory spans are just three seconds long — but is it true? Scientists have proven that goldfish memory spans are nowhere near as short..
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