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A Sense of Self

Memory, the Brain, and Who We Are

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

How do our brains store—and then conjure up—past experiences to make us who we are?

A twinge of sadness, a rush of love, a knot of loss, a whiff of regret. Memories have the power to move us, often when we least expect it, a sign of the complex neural process that continues in the background of our everyday lives. This process shapes us: filtering the world around us, informing our behavior and feeding our imagination.

Psychiatrist Veronica O'Keane has spent many years observing how memory and experience are interwoven. In this rich, fascinating exploration, she asks, among other things: Why can memories feel so real? How are our sensations and perceptions connected with them? Why is place so important in memory? Are there such things as "true" and "false" memories? And, above all, what happens when the process of memory is disrupted by mental illness? O'Keane uses the broken memories of psychosis to illuminate the integrated human brain, offering a new way of thinking about our own personal experiences.

Drawing on poignant accounts that include her own experiences, as well as what we can learn from insights in literature and fairytales and the latest neuroscientific research, O'Keane reframes our understanding of the extraordinary puzzle that is the human brain and how it changes during its growth from birth to adolescence and old age. By elucidating this process, she exposes the way that the formation of memory in the brain is vital to the creation of our sense of self.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 22, 2021
      Psychiatrist O’Keane draws on her work with patients as she seeks to understand “the nature of the matter of memory” in her thoughtful debut. Her desire to get to the bottom of how memory works, she writes, was inspired by a patient named Edith, who, in the early 2000s, experienced postpartum psychosis and believed her baby had been replaced with a substitute. When Edith recovered, she understood that the events she remembered weren’t real, but insisted that her memory of those events was. O’Keane was fascinated and began to wonder if there was a difference between a memory of an actual event and a memory of an imagined event. O’Keane’s ensuing “journey of memory from sensory experiences of the world and inner feeling states to neural memory lattices” includes dense discussions of the brain’s memory system that spark when she illustrates the glitches cooked into the memory-forming process. One woman, for example, believed her house was haunted and extended that delusion to other places; bipolar disorder warped another patient’s sense of time. O’Keane offers no shortage of intriguing insights and accounts, but readers looking for a cohesive narrative will be left wanting; this lands more as a series of snapshots. Still, it’s an immersive and informative look at how memory works, and what happens when it doesn’t.

    • Kirkus

      April 1, 2021
      A veteran psychiatrist examines how memories form to create accounts of who we are. Memory is a function of both time and place. For very young children, writes O'Keane, a professor of psychiatry at Trinity College Dublin, time "doesn't exist experientially." The days constitute an eternal present. "Children are not so much adaptable as partly amnesic," she adds, which helps explain why most adults have so few crystal-clear memories of their earliest years. Nonetheless, as she writes in this pleasing blend of psychiatric case studies and the latest findings of neuroscience--findings that, she observes, haven't yet been fully embraced or even understood by most physicians--the early years are critical to who we become. Children born into poverty, for instance, suffer disproportionately from stress (and associated high levels of cortisol), which has detrimental effects on general health. As for older people, many are stressed and forgetful--but not necessarily because their minds are slipping. O'Keane counsels that things are not so much forgotten as that we "never laid down a memory for it in the first place," an act that involves building dendritic connections in the brain. Whereas time stands still for the young, it flies by for the old, a matter of subjective sense. The author delivers interesting observations on nearly every page. For example, the brains of people who suffer from depression have a smaller left hippocampus than people who don't, and a mark of human phylogenetics is the pruning of the jungle of information from childhood in our 20s and 30s, "enabling the developing brain to take shortcuts through learned pathways of knowledge." A virtue of O'Keane's complex but not daunting discussion is her insistence that our understanding of the science of the brain should, among other things, serve to remove the stigma associated with mental health conditions such as schizophrenia, for "individuals with psychiatric illnesses have a great deal to tell neuroscience, and the larger world, about the processes involved in the organization of memory." A welcome new voice in the literature of consciousness and neuroscience.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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