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  • Are all of your memories real?

  • Did everything happen

  • the way you remember it?

  • What if somebody filled your brain

  • with memories that aren't yours?

  • A memory is made in three major steps:

  • encoding information,

  • storing it,

  • and then retrieving it.

  • And it all happens here.

  • Your brain has approximately 100 billion neurons,

  • all passing signals back and forth,

  • through a complex network

  • of 1,000 trillion synaptic connections.

  • Your memories aren't tucked away

  • in one specific place in your brain.

  • Instead, they are kept in different groups of neurons,

  • which are called engrams.

  • And there are a few ways to hack them.

  • In 2016, researchers at MIT

  • implanted a false memory

  • into a mouse.

  • They did it with the help of a technique

  • called optogenetics.

  • Basically, they genetically engineered mice

  • to have a gene that responds to light.

  • And then they fired lasers

  • to stimulate that gene.

  • But you don't need to undergo any genetic engineering

  • to have false memories.

  • It's relatively easy to manipulate your brain

  • into thinking that it's storing information

  • it doesn't actually have.

  • Memories of traumatic events

  • can be especially vulnerable

  • to outside influences.

  • There are cases of people remembering

  • being abducted by aliens,

  • when in reality, they weren't.

  • Other people remembered being present

  • at satanic rituals where humans were sacrificed,

  • even though they weren't.

  • All these people can thank hypnotherapists,

  • and their ability to plant false memories

  • using only the power of suggestion.

  • Memories are not really a reality.

  • They are something that can be created,

  • molded and influenced.

  • That's why eyewitnesses aren't too reliable

  • when it comes to describing the details

  • of a crime scene.

  • For example, in one study,

  • test subjects were shown footage of car accidents,

  • and 26% of them "remembered" seeing a bus,

  • despite there not being any bus in the footage.

  • We are having false memories

  • fed to our brains on a daily basis,

  • through social media and news.

  • With the studies currently underway,

  • it's possible that a more direct,

  • "in-brain" connection could be made

  • and used to manipulate and create memories.

  • If that happens, who would make the call

  • on uploading false memories?

  • Would the person receiving them

  • be aware of what was happening?

  • Maybe we could use these kinds of memory implants

  • to reform criminals faster,

  • or help make a dying person's

  • final days better for them.

  • Would we make businesses that implant fake vacations?

  • Or rewrite the memories

  • of some traumatic events?

  • Someone suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder

  • could have their memory wiped clean

  • and start their life again.

  • We could overwrite the memories of abuse,

  • or upload memories that would help

  • a person to cope with a difficult situation from their past.

  • And it would all seem so real,

  • they might never know it wasn't.

  • In the future, we could implant memories

  • that form a decent moral code

  • in everyone on the planet,

  • and create a respectful society free of crime.

  • On the other hand,

  • this could go very wrong, in so many ways.

  • The technology could be used

  • to alter the neurons in a person's brain,

  • making them feel something they really don't,

  • or think they did something they actually didn't.

  • Would you trust your medical professional

  • if you required a memory implant?

  • I would rather upload my brain to the cloud,

  • and become digitally immortal.

  • But that's a story for another WHAT IF.

Are all of your memories real?

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あなたの記憶が偽物だったら? (What If Your Memories Were Fake?)

  • 4 1
    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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