For people with Highly Superior Autobiographical Memory, or HSAM, every day is memorable. Ask them what they were doing on this date 10 years ago, and they’ll be able to tell you. Markie Pasternak, one of the youngest people identified with HSAM, and Michael Yassa, PhD, director of the Center for the Neurobiology of Learning and Memory at the University of California Irvine, talk about what it’s like to have this ability, what we know about how the brains of people with HSAM store and retrieve this vast amount of autobiographical information, and what studying this unique ability can teach us more generally about how memory works.
Links
Michael Yassa, PhD
Markie Pasternak
The psychology of science denial, doubt and disbelief, with Gale Sinatra, PhD, and Barbara Hofer, PhD
How science can help you change your behavior for the better with Katy Milkman, PhD
The seven sins of memory, with Daniel Schacter, PhD
Twenty years after 9/11, what have we learned about collective trauma? With Roxane Cohen Silver, PhD
Power: How you get it, how it can change you, with Dacher Keltner, PhD
Sport psychology, peak performance and athletes’ mental health, with Jamie Shapiro, PhD
Creativity, insight and “eureka moments,” with John Kounios, PhD
The psychology of superstition, with Stuart Vyse, PhD
Encore: How children’s amazing brains shaped humanity, with Alison Gopnik, PhD
Why we’re burned out and what to do about it, with Christina Maslach, PhD
Tasty words, colorful sounds: How people with synesthesia experience the world, with Julia Simner, PhD
Can a personality test determine if you’re a good fit for a job? With Fred Oswald, PhD
How to overcome feeling like an impostor, with Lisa Orbé-Austin, PhD, and Kevin Cokley, PhD
Back to the office? The future of remote and hybrid work, with Tsedal Neeley, PhD
The history of LGBTQ psychology from Stonewall to now, with Peter Hegarty, PhD
How ‘open science’ is changing psychological research, with Brian Nosek, PhD
What do we know about preventing gun violence? With Susan Sorenson, PhD
COVID 19, Insomnia, and the Importance of Sleep, with Jennifer Martin, PhD
The future of policing one year after George Floyd's death, with Cedric Alexander, PsyD
Technology is changing how we talk to each other, with Jeff Hancock, PhD
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