How Memory Works

Sadly, I did not discover how memory works until my 3rd year of teaching. Suddenly the world made more sense.

*


We recall thousands of events and procedures every day, but what is memory?

In this comic explainer, The Florey Institute’s Dr Jee Hyun Kim explains how memory works, why we recall some things more easily than others and what we can do to improve our retention of those events and facts that we really want to hold onto.


Illustrations by Wes Mountain for The Conversation.


This is one of a series of new formats that we’re experimenting with at The Conversation to explore the work of our authors and their discoveries.

If you have any feedback on what works – and doesn’t work – about this format, we’d love to hear from you. Please email [email protected] with your thoughts.


Jee Hyun Kim, Head of Developmental Psychobiology Lab, Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

The Conversation

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Recent Posts

An image of a whiteboard with faint traces of previous writings and diagrams, creating a visually distracting pattern. The whiteboard is in an office

Attention on a Hazzy Whiteboard

Switching attention leaves residue. Sometimes I feel like I’m swimming through that residue. The schemas I’m holding need focused and sustained attention, and the cludgy remnants of previous mental states and distractions makes the thinking I enjoy turn into thinking that is exhausting (and poorly done).

Read More »