Mind Matters: Exploring Human Psychology

Memory – How We Remember and Forget
This episode explores the fascinating psychology of memory, showing that it is not a perfect recording system but a dynamic, reconstructive process. It introduces the three main stages—sensory memory, short-term memory, and long-term memory—and explains the differences between explicit memories (facts and experiences we can recall consciously) and implicit memories (skills and learned behaviors we use without awareness).
The episode examines how memories are encoded, stored, and retrieved, while also exploring why we forget through decay, interference, and retrieval failure. It highlights how memory can distort itself, leading to false recollections, especially in situations like eyewitness testimony.
Finally, it discusses practical ways to strengthen memory—through chunking, rehearsal, visualization, and sleep—and emphasizes the central role memory plays in shaping identity and meaning. Memory is portrayed not as flawless storage but as a living narrative, constantly edited as we live and grow.