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Why Can’t We Remember the First Few Years of Life?
Study Finds ^ | March 21, 2025 | Staff

Posted on 03/21/2025 12:27:09 PM PDT by Red Badger

Babies do form memories — they just can’t be retrieved later on

In a nutshell

* Babies do form memories. Brain scans show that by around 12 months, infants’ hippocampus — the brain’s memory center — is active during learning and linked to later recognition, suggesting babies can encode memories earlier than previously believed.

* The memories may not be lost, just inaccessible. The study supports the idea that “infantile amnesia” isn’t due to a failure to form memories, but rather a later inability to retrieve them.

* Different memory systems develop at different times. Even younger babies (as young as 3 months) show signs of statistical learning — recognizing patterns — while episodic memory (specific events) seems to emerge closer to the end of the first year.

NEW HAVEN, Conn. — Have you ever wondered why you can’t remember being a baby? This blank space in our memory, known as “infantile amnesia,” has puzzled scientists for years. Most of us can’t recall anything before age three or four. Until recently, researchers thought baby brains simply couldn’t form memories yet, that the memory-making part of our brain (the hippocampus) wasn’t developed enough.

But it turns out babies might remember more than we thought. Research just published in the journal Science shows that babies as young as one year old can actually form memories in their hippocampus. The study, led by researchers at various American universities, suggests our earliest memories aren’t missing, we just can’t access them later.

How Do You Study Memory in Babies Who Can’t Talk?

You can’t exactly ask a baby, “Do you remember this?” The researchers came up with a clever solution. They showed 26 babies (ages 4 months to 2 years) pictures of faces, objects, and scenes while scanning their brains. Later, they showed each baby two pictures side by side, one they’d seen before and one new one, and tracked where the babies looked.

“When babies have seen something just once before, we expect them to look at it more when they see it again,” says lead study author Nick Turk-Browne from Yale University, in a statement. “So in this task, if an infant stares at the previously seen image more than the new one next to it, that can be interpreted as the baby recognizing it as familiar.”

Getting babies to lie still in a brain scanner is no small feat. The research team has spent years developing special techniques to make this possible. They made the babies comfortable and only scanned them when they were naturally awake and content.

The Big One-Year Memory Milestone

Babies begin forming memories around one year old. (© M. Business – stock.adobe.com) The brain scans showed that when a baby’s hippocampus was more active while seeing a picture for the first time, they were more likely to stare at that same picture later, showing they may have remembered it.

This ability to remember showed a clear age pattern. Babies younger than 12 months didn’t show consistent memory signals in their brains, but the older babies did. And the specific part of the hippocampus that lit up, the back portion, is the same area adults use for episodic memories.

The researchers had previously discovered that even younger babies (as young as three months) can do a different kind of memory called “statistical learning.” This is basically spotting patterns across experiences rather than remembering specific events.

“Statistical learning is about extracting the structure in the world around us,” says Turk-Browne. “This is critical for the development of language, vision, concepts, and more. So it’s understandable why statistical learning may come into play earlier than episodic memory.”

These different memory types use different pathways in the brain, with pattern learning developing earlier than specific event memory. This makes good developmental sense because babies need to learn how the world works before focusing on individual events.

So What Happens to Our Baby Memories?

This new research flips our understanding of infantile amnesia. The problem isn’t that babies can’t make memories; they clearly can. The mystery is what happens to those memories afterward. The researchers propose two possibilities.

3D rendered medical illustration of the hippocampus. (Credit: Sebastian Kaulitzki/Shutterstock)

“One is that the memories may not be converted into long-term storage and thus simply don’t last long. Another is that the memories are still there long after encoding and we just can’t access them,” says Turk-Browne.

The team is now testing whether kids can remember videos taken from their perspective when they were babies. Early results hint that these memories might stick around until preschool age before fading away.

“We’re working to track the durability of hippocampal memories across childhood and even beginning to entertain the radical, almost sci-fi possibility that they may endure in some form into adulthood, despite being inaccessible,” says Turk-Browne.

Your baby brain was busy making memories long before you could talk about them. Those formative experiences might still be stored somewhere in your brain, you just can’t get to them. Though we’ll never consciously recall those first years, this research suggests those experiences weren’t lost to an undeveloped brain but encoded somewhere in our hippocampus, potentially shaping us in ways we’re only beginning to understand.

Paper Summary

Methodology

The researchers adapted memory research methods for infants who cannot verbally report memories or follow explicit instructions. Using a modified MRI setup with specialized equipment for infant comfort and safety, they scanned 26 infants aged 4.2 to 24.9 months while awake. Each infant viewed novel images (faces, objects, scenes) for 2 seconds during “encoding” trials. After a delay of 20-100 seconds, they were shown a “test” trial featuring the previously seen image alongside a new one, while eye-tracking technology measured which image they looked at longer. This visual paired comparison test uses infants’ natural looking behavior to assess memory without requiring verbal responses.

Results

The study revealed that when infants showed a familiarity preference (looking longer at the previously seen image), researchers could trace this back to higher hippocampal activity during the initial encoding phase. This effect was present across all participants but was most robust in infants older than 12 months. Memory effects were strongest in the posterior hippocampus—the same region heavily involved in episodic memory in adults. Memory signals were clearer for objects and scenes than for faces, and stronger for shorter versus longer delays between encoding and testing.

Limitations

Despite its groundbreaking nature, the study’s sample size of 26 infants, while substantial for challenging infant neuroimaging research, is relatively small. The fixed stimulus duration during encoding may not have given younger infants sufficient processing time. The single brief exposures to stimuli likely created relatively weak memory traces that may differ qualitatively from richer autobiographical memories. The research also can’t determine whether infant hippocampal encoding extends beyond simple recognition to include contextual information central to full episodic memories.

Discussion and Takeaways

This study provides the first direct neural evidence that infants can encode individual memories using the hippocampus beginning around one year of age. The findings contradict theories that infantile amnesia stems primarily from encoding deficits due to hippocampal immaturity. Instead, post-encoding mechanisms related to memory storage, consolidation, or retrieval may be responsible. The developmental emergence of hippocampal memory around 12 months corresponds with behavioral changes in infant memory abilities noted in previous research. The research suggests early experiences may influence development even if not consciously remembered later and raises questions about whether techniques might someday access these seemingly lost early memories.

Funding and Disclosures

The research was supported by several funding sources, including a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship to Tristan Yates, internal funding from Yale University’s Department of Psychology and Faculty of Arts and Sciences, support from the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, and a grant from the James S. McDonnell Foundation. The researchers declared no competing interests.

Publication Information

The paper titled “Hippocampal encoding of memories in human infants” was authored by Tristan S. Yates, Jared Fel, Dawoon Choi, Juliana E. Trach, Lillian Behm, Cameron T. Ellis, and Nicholas B. Turk-Browne. It was published in the journal Science on March 21, 2025. Raw data and analysis code were made publicly available through repositories linked in the paper.


TOPICS: Health/Medicine; History; Military/Veterans; Society
KEYWORDS: faithandphilosophy; hippocampus; rebirthing; toldtheycant
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To: ansel12
Trauma, I was told that after being circumcised I couldn’t even speak coherently for more than a year, my mind has blocked out that period.

I remember that fondly because my parents told me it was "body sculpting." My self-image skyrocketed and I immediately developed the loquacious personality I have to this day.

21 posted on 03/21/2025 12:46:08 PM PDT by PJ-Comix (Yes, I am the Toxic Troll Terminator)
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To: HYPOCRACY

So were we all!..................


22 posted on 03/21/2025 12:46:54 PM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: cgbg; Mr. Jeeves

See post 6, it could have been worse.


23 posted on 03/21/2025 12:47:53 PM PDT by ansel12 ((NATO warrior under Reagan, and RA under Nixon, bemoaning the pro-Russians from Vietnam to Ukraine.))
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To: Mr. Jeeves

ROFL!!!


24 posted on 03/21/2025 12:48:00 PM PDT by MeneMeneTekelUpharsin (Freedom is the freedom to discipline yourself so others don't have to do it for you.)
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To: Red Badger

I was 5 years old when Kennedy was killed. I remember none of the events of that time.

But I do have many memories of where I lived and other things that were important to 3-5 year olds.

FWIW


25 posted on 03/21/2025 12:48:32 PM PDT by Responsibility2nd (Nobody elected Elon Musk? Well nobody elected the Deep State either.)
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To: Harmless Teddy Bear

I have enough trouble remembering to take my meds, much less what I did 65+ years ago!.....................


26 posted on 03/21/2025 12:48:46 PM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: Red Badger

We moved out of our first house at my age of 2.5, so everything I remember in that house was from being a baby or toddler. I remember my crib, my mobile, my high chair, the old 1950s Buick, the TV, war on B&W TV every single night, and the entire house.

Can’t remember yesterday, though.


27 posted on 03/21/2025 12:49:42 PM PDT by LittleBillyInfidel (This tagline has been formatted to fit the screen. Some content has been edited.)
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To: Red Badger

Look at it this way you were in this nice warm world floating around, fully fed, and suddenly it is gone!
I’ve never seen a birth where the newly born was happy.
It is tough on Moms and their offspring. I’m referring to mammals only.
Welcome to your new life!


28 posted on 03/21/2025 12:51:18 PM PDT by rellic (No such thing as a moderate Moslem or Democrat )
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To: Fester Chugabrew

Hence your screen name.

Makes sense.


29 posted on 03/21/2025 12:51:25 PM PDT by Responsibility2nd (Nobody elected Elon Musk? Well nobody elected the Deep State either.)
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To: Jane Long

I have a couple of hazy memories from age 2.5. A nice lady named Mrs Brown stayed with me at my Grandpa’s house while my Mom was in the hospital having my kid sister.


30 posted on 03/21/2025 12:52:37 PM PDT by Georgia Girl 2 (The only purpose of a pistol is to fight your way back to the rifle you should never have dropped)
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To: Red Badger

Because your focus is upon:

- source of security
- source of love
- source of food and information that leads to survival

And then, there is a sibbling who tests the strength of materials by hitting you in the head, and you forget everything except how to cry.


31 posted on 03/21/2025 12:53:16 PM PDT by linMcHlp
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To: Harmless Teddy Bear; Red Badger; null and void
Nothing really interesting happens and we tend to remember interesting. Even our current memories are things that are interesting.

That really sums up why I have very few memories!

32 posted on 03/21/2025 12:55:29 PM PDT by Ezekiel (🆘️ "Come fly with US". 🔴 Ingenuity -- because the Son of David begins with MARS ♂️, aka every man)
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To: Red Badger

Clearly ‘why’ this occurs is because locking memories simply isn’t needed or necessary for the infant at that stage to reach sexual maturity and be able to fend for itself in order to reproduce. The mechanics of it is just filler to keep molecular biologists occupied.


33 posted on 03/21/2025 12:58:16 PM PDT by SpaceBar
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To: Red Badger

PS.

I do remember when I discovered that food comes from the refrigerator.

I finally figured out, how to open the refrigerator door.

I was looking up and saw the large wooden salad bowl, poorly balanced on top of the refrigerator door and . . .

The bowl quickly returning to earth, with my head in the way.


34 posted on 03/21/2025 12:58:21 PM PDT by linMcHlp
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To: Red Badger

I remember when I was sitting of the floor when my dad walk in, stopped in the doorway, and started crying. Much later on I asked my mother what that was about. She said he had just seen his mother die. I was eight months old.

And I can recall before them, but certainly not a consistent chain.


35 posted on 03/21/2025 12:58:36 PM PDT by odawg
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To: Red Badger
"Another is that the memories are still there long after encoding and we just can’t access them,” says Turk-Browne."

That is what my theory has always been.

36 posted on 03/21/2025 1:02:54 PM PDT by A Navy Vet (USA Birth Certificate - 1787. Death Certificate - 2021? )
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To: Red Badger

I have one memory from when I was a little over a year old, that of my Mother pushing me in a stroller alongside another mother and her baby who later became a childhood friend. I remember clearly the parking lot being covered by small pebbles and when I told my Mother about it when I was around 10 or so, she said I was correct in my recall.

I also remember going to the hospital with my Dad to pick up my Mom and new baby brother and bring him home in a bassinet when I was 2 1/2. I watched my Dad place the bassinet in his 1949 Studebaker


37 posted on 03/21/2025 1:03:15 PM PDT by Inyo-Mono
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To: Red Badger

Earliest memory was at about 20 months - I recall my aunt taking a photo of me outside. Found the photo many years later and recognized the event, had timestamp on old photo paper.


38 posted on 03/21/2025 1:06:30 PM PDT by larrytown (A Cadet will not lie, cheat, steal, or tolerate those who do. Then they graduate...)
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To: Red Badger

Baby sister’s husband would say “Good Night Katrina” at bedtime for months while she was pregnant.

Immediately after birth, he said “Hello Katrina” to her and the baby immediately turned her head and looked straight at him.

Kids are not unmarked blobs at birth. They’re already processing and remembering.


39 posted on 03/21/2025 1:07:27 PM PDT by dagunk (-- Unknown)
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To: nutmeg

bookmark


40 posted on 03/21/2025 1:08:00 PM PDT by nutmeg
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