Parentingfromwww.nature.com1 month agoWe Make Memories as BabiesSo Why Do We Forget Them?Babies can form memories as young as one year old, potentially explaining infantile amnesia.
fromNature1 month agoParentingBabies do make memories - so why can't we recall our earliest years?Babies as young as one can form memories, suggesting infantile amnesia is due to retrieval challenges rather than memory creation.
fromArs Technica1 month agoOMG science"Infantile amnesia" occurs despite babies showing memory activityInfantile amnesia affects memory retention in both humans and mammals, but hidden memories can be re-activated under certain conditions.
Parentingfromwww.nature.com1 month agoWe Make Memories as BabiesSo Why Do We Forget Them?Babies can form memories as young as one year old, potentially explaining infantile amnesia.
fromNature1 month agoParentingBabies do make memories - so why can't we recall our earliest years?Babies as young as one can form memories, suggesting infantile amnesia is due to retrieval challenges rather than memory creation.
fromArs Technica1 month agoOMG science"Infantile amnesia" occurs despite babies showing memory activityInfantile amnesia affects memory retention in both humans and mammals, but hidden memories can be re-activated under certain conditions.
Parentingfromenglish.elpais.com1 month agoWhy we don't remember being a babyWe typically do not remember events from our early years, and memories formed are often inaccessible as we grow.