Wednesday, March 10, 2021

Remembering everyday events typically takes less time than the actual duration of the retrieved episodes, a phenomenon that has been referred to as the temporal compression of events in episodic memory

Slices of the past: how events are temporally compressed in episodic memory. Arnaud D’Argembeau, Olivier Jeunehomme & David Stawarczyk. Memory, Mar 9 2021. https://doi.org/10.1080/09658211.2021.1896737

Rolf Degen's take: Similar to the "life review" near death, where the whole life flashes before the inner eye at a time-lapse pace, our everyday memories also contain a compressed version of events, with a "lossy compression" mode, like MP3

Abstract: Remembering everyday events typically takes less time than the actual duration of the retrieved episodes, a phenomenon that has been referred to as the temporal compression of events in episodic memory. Here, we review recent studies that have shed light on how this compression mechanism operates. The evidence suggests that the continuous flow of experience is not represented as such in episodic memory. Instead, the unfolding of events is recalled as a succession of moments or slices of past experience that includes temporal discontinuities—portions of past experience are omitted when remembering. Consequently, the rate of event compression is not constant but depends on the density of recalled segments of past experience.

KEYWORDS: Episodic memoryevent segmentationcompressiontimeautobiographical memory


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