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Friday, July 29, 2022

Why can’t you remember being born, learning to walk or saying your first words? What scientists know about ‘infantile amnesia’ [The Conversation, June 2022]

Title:
Why can’t you remember being born, learning to walk or saying your first words? What scientists know about ‘infantile amnesia’
 
Author:
Vanessa LoBue 
Assistant Professor of Psychology, Rutgers University - Newark
 
Published:
The Conversation, 8 June 2022
 
From the article:
Whenever I teach about memory in my child development class at Rutgers University, I open by asking my students to recall their very first memories. Some students talk about their first day of pre-K; others talk about a time when they got hurt or upset; some cite the day their younger sibling was born.  
 
Despite vast differences in the details, these memories do have a couple of things in common: They’re all autobiographical, or memories of significant experiences in a person’s life, and they typically didn’t happen before the age of 2 or 3. In fact, most people can’t remember events from the first few years of their lives – a phenomenon researchers have dubbed infantile amnesia. But why can’t we remember the things that happened to us when we were infants? Does memory start to work only at a certain age?