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In this week’s episode, Matt Walker explores memory's astonishing malleability, challenging the belief that recollections are fixed. He highlights Loftus's car crash study, showing how subtle language altered speed memories and implanted false details, and reviews the "Lost in the Mall" experiment which proved fabricated autobiographical memories can be instilled. Matt also notes that neuroimaging reveals false and true memory patterns in the hippocampus are remarkably similar, underscoring memory's deceptive, fluid nature, rather than a factual archive.
Our host goes on to discuss groundbreaking research like optogenetics from Tonegawa's lab, demonstrating manipulation to implant false fear memories at a cellular level. This underpins "memory reconsolidation" by Karim Nader, showing retrieved memories enter a "labile window" for modification. This opens profound avenues for therapies: Image Rehearsal Therapy for nightmares and propranolol for PTSD effectively weaken emotional trauma. The episode concludes by suggesting identity, objective truth, and forgiveness are dynamic, neurologically modifiable constructs, not static realities.
Please note that Matt is not a medical doctor, and none of the content in this podcast should be considered medical advice in any way, shape, or form, nor prescriptive in any way.
Podcast partner and sponsor, Shopify, made launching Matt's merchandise incredibly smooth with its integrated sales system. Shopify simplifies everything from online stores to in-person sales. Start your exclusive trial and see for yourself at shopify.com/mattwalker.
As always, if you have thoughts or feedback you’d like to share, please reach out to Matt:
Matt: Instagram @drmattwalker, X @sleepdiplomat,
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCA3FB1fOtY4Vd8yqLaUvolg
By Dr. Matt Walker4.9
890890 ratings
In this week’s episode, Matt Walker explores memory's astonishing malleability, challenging the belief that recollections are fixed. He highlights Loftus's car crash study, showing how subtle language altered speed memories and implanted false details, and reviews the "Lost in the Mall" experiment which proved fabricated autobiographical memories can be instilled. Matt also notes that neuroimaging reveals false and true memory patterns in the hippocampus are remarkably similar, underscoring memory's deceptive, fluid nature, rather than a factual archive.
Our host goes on to discuss groundbreaking research like optogenetics from Tonegawa's lab, demonstrating manipulation to implant false fear memories at a cellular level. This underpins "memory reconsolidation" by Karim Nader, showing retrieved memories enter a "labile window" for modification. This opens profound avenues for therapies: Image Rehearsal Therapy for nightmares and propranolol for PTSD effectively weaken emotional trauma. The episode concludes by suggesting identity, objective truth, and forgiveness are dynamic, neurologically modifiable constructs, not static realities.
Please note that Matt is not a medical doctor, and none of the content in this podcast should be considered medical advice in any way, shape, or form, nor prescriptive in any way.
Podcast partner and sponsor, Shopify, made launching Matt's merchandise incredibly smooth with its integrated sales system. Shopify simplifies everything from online stores to in-person sales. Start your exclusive trial and see for yourself at shopify.com/mattwalker.
As always, if you have thoughts or feedback you’d like to share, please reach out to Matt:
Matt: Instagram @drmattwalker, X @sleepdiplomat,
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCA3FB1fOtY4Vd8yqLaUvolg

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