| The Brain's Halves Cooperate to Help Us Remember Events | |
Findings also help explain why children don't remember events until about age
4, when the fibers connecting the halves fully develop
WASHINGTON -- Does coming from a family full of "lefties" tend to make a person
better at remembering events? The data from two recent experiments answer in the
affirmative. What's more, psychologists may finally be able to explain why kids
don't remember events until they are about four years old. This recent research
is reported in the October issue of Neuropsychology, published by the American
Psychological Association (APA).
Stephen D. Christman, Ph.D., and Ruth E. Propper, Ph.D., of the University of
Toledo in Ohio, studied memory as a function of family handedness.
Interestingly, people don't have to be personally left-handed to share a unique
trait: There is evidence that the two brain hemispheres of even right-handers
with left-handed relatives share functions more equally, interact more and are
connected by a larger corpus callosum (the bundle of mediating fibers) than the
hemispheres of people with right-handed relatives. Although it is not well
understood, there is a hereditary component to handedness.
Christman and Propper studied two types of memory -- episodic (the recall and
recognition of events) and non-episodic (factual memory and implicit memory, the
latter of which concerns things people "just know"). Strength or weakness in
either, says Christman, "may not have much effect in educational settings, as we
can recall things we have learned by 'remembering' them (episodic memory) or by
'knowing' them (implicit memory). The main difference is that people who
'remember' can also recall details about the time and place at which they first
learned this fact."
In the first experiment, which studied 180 right-handed Air Force recruits at
Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio, Christman and Propper found that for
different types of word-memory tasks, participants with left-handed relatives
had superior episodic memory and inferior implicit memory, at a rate greater
than chance. The researchers therefore speculate that a higher level of
inter-hemispheric interaction facilitates episodic memory.
In the second experiment, the authors studied episodic and semantic (factual)
memory in 84 right-handed undergraduates, studying what happened when they
presented words and letter strings to either one part of the brain or to both.
When Christman and Propper presented stimuli to one part of the brain,
participants remembered facts better. When the researchers presented stimuli to
both halves of the brain, participants remembered events better -- again
supporting the role of inter-hemispheric processing in episodic memory.
Christman and Propper conclude that because our brains' two halves work together
to help us remember events, people whose brains' halves work together more
actively (people with left-handedness in their families) remember events better
than they remember facts. As a result, the authors say that memory studies
should factor in the familial and probably personal handedness of participants
(having a weak versus strong hand preference may also matter). Further research
may help explain why episodic memory benefits from the two halves working
together, whereas factual/implicit memory is better processed in one half alone.
The researchers stress that memory performance has nothing to do with so-called
"brain dominance." "While the notion of people being right-brained or
left-brained is common in the popular press," says Christman, "it has received
very little support in the scientific literature. Both hemispheres of all people
are going to be involved in virtually all tasks."
Finally, the findings shed light on why children have no episodic memories until
about age 4. The onset of episodic memory roughly coincides with the corpus
callosum's maturation and myelinization, the growth of fatty protective sheaths
around nerve fibers. In light of the findings, it would mean that a functional
corpus callosum is critical in the formation of event memories and therefore
explain why its maturation in early childhood is at least partly responsible for
the emergence of episodic memory.
Article: "Superior Episodic Memory is Associated with Interhemispheric
Processing," Stephen D. Christman, Ph.D., and Ruth E. Propper, Ph.D., both then
with the University of Toledo, Toledo, Ohio; Neuropsychology, Vol. 15, No 4.
Ruth E. Propper is now at the Department of Psychology, Merrimack College.
(Full text of the article is available after November 10 at
http://www.apa.org/journals/neu.html)
---American Psychological Association
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