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Italy's magical mind may unlock memory mystery
Reuters ^

Posted on 05/19/2002 8:06:25 PM PDT by Dallas

LUGO DI RAVENNA, Italy, May 20 (Reuters) - Gianni Golfera can remember his first flight as though it were yesterday, the colour of the plane, the radio messages, sitting on his mother's knee. He was only six months old.

Gifted with a startlingly accurate memory, 24-year-old Golfera spent his adolescence training his mind and despite never seeking the limelight his skill has seen him perform under television spotlights and grace countless magazine covers.

"I can remember the names of 100 people just introduced to me, a string of 15,000 numbers and recite a speech that I've just heard," he told Reuters, wearing one of his seven identical trademark black suits.

Scientists have latched onto his filmic mind, hoping it will reveal the secrets of the memory gene, and thereby get one step closer to managing memory-loss diseases like Alzheimer's.

Yet for researchers, the really remarkable thing about this dark-haired man from a sleepy town in northern Italy, is the fact that his ability to access huge tomes of recorded information is also shared by his father and grandfather.

All three are pilots who leave inflight maps and manuals at home and remain slightly bemused by everyone else's surprise at their talents.

"Our family philosophy is not to consider ourselves a phenomenon," said Gianni's father, 45-year-old Andrea Golfera. "We might be pilots, but we keep our feet firmly on the ground."

Researchers however are already flying high at the prospect of being able to study the brains of three generations with the rare gift of photographic memory.

"I am convinced there is a genetic component. By studying these more evolved memories we will be able to identify the genes that are involved in memory," said neuro-scientist Antonio Malgaroli of Milan's San Raffaele institute.

UNLOCKING THE MIND

Golfera is excited by the research, hoping that perhaps it will allow him to be remembered long into the future.

"I'll be delighted for them to do all the tests they like on me. I hope that by studying my DNA they will discover a key that I cannot find myself," he said.

The DNA in genes transcribes the recipe for proteins which make everything from muscle tissue to brain synapses.

A deeper understanding of the genes that govern memory -- its acquisition, development and loss -- could open the door to understanding how we recall and forget, why we remember and where memories are stored.

"Our goal is to map the changes that occur when the brain remembers, once we have identified the molecule involved, the mechanism at the level of proteins coded by DNA, we can search for it in the Golfera family," Malgaroli said.

The Golferas always took their recall ability for granted.

"When you remember, it's something 100 percent natural, it is only when you realise that other people don't do the same that you realise it is something special," explained Andrea.

Grandfather Bartolomeo, 82, was a star pilot during World War Two whose lightening memory put him ahead of the enemy.

The youngest Golfera grew up fascinated by how quickly everyone around him forgot, whilst he continued to remember.

Vestiges of his childhood still linger in his adult life -- such as his continued belief in mythical figures like Father Christmas. "It is like I was told yesterday and I have no reason to disbelieve," he said.

IMAGINING THE IDEA

Golfera was never top of the class, infuriating teachers at school by refusing to take notes.

Instead he set about translating from Latin a Renaissance Italian text by Giordano Bruno on the art of memory, memorising all the books that Bruno would have read in the process and developing his own technique.

"Every idea has a cognitive weight, to remember you have to make things weightless by translating them into a picture," Golfera said. "Then you associate images and chain all the ideas together so they interact."

When the mind remembers, electrical impulses pass through the brain, like switching on light bulbs. The more emotion and sensory stimulation is involved in the experience, the more light bulbs are illuminated and the more vivid the memory.

Golfera developed his own method which enhances the way the brain naturally processes information -- linking sounds, colours, emotions and tastes to ideas, numbers and objects.

To help him, Golfera has memorised thousands of familiar places and it is in these virtual rooms that he stores memories.

"Memory is a problem of order, not space. You have to know where to look for what you have remembered."

Malgaroli agrees: "The memory system is an infinite container. What you remember is not stored in a very precise way, it is continually being re-organised."

Yet there is a darker side to having a limitless memory.

"I have problems conceiving of time and space because all my memories are instantly available to me," Gianni said, "Death is a strange concept to me because my memories don't fade, when people die for me it is as if they just changed address."

And forget about indulging in rosy-hued remembrances of nostalgia. Golfera remembers the good, the bad and the ugly with equal force.

"I'd like to be able to manage my memories and control my dreams," he said. "I think of the mind as a parallel universe and mine just keeps on expanding, I doubt I'll ever fill it."


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1 posted on 05/19/2002 8:06:26 PM PDT by Dallas
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To: Dallas
This is depressing.

I count it as a good day if I remember to zip my fly.

2 posted on 05/19/2002 8:15:00 PM PDT by Ronin
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To: Ronin
ROFLMBO.....hahhaahaaaaaaaaaaaa
3 posted on 05/19/2002 8:17:31 PM PDT by Dallas
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To: Dallas
My 14-year old is like this. He can read a short story (less than 35 or so pages) two times back-to-back, then recite it word-for-word from memory.

It is the most remarkable thing I have ever seen (next to childbirth, of course).

He has facts at his fingertips. He loves to read, and obtaining historical facts is a hobby for him. I can pick a date in world history and he'll tell me about it (from what he has read) verbatim. The crtical aspect is ensuring that he learns the TRUE history of a subject without bias (something you can't always find in school textbooks) because he won't forget it.

(yes, he is homeschooled -- he has a desire for knowledge that publik skoolz would ruin).

4 posted on 05/19/2002 8:52:21 PM PDT by ImaGraftedBranch
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To: Dallas
I'll always remember what's-his-name.
5 posted on 05/19/2002 8:56:51 PM PDT by Consort
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To: Dallas
More evolved memories? That's a bit of an assumption.
6 posted on 05/19/2002 9:03:10 PM PDT by ValerieUSA
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To: Ronin
"I count it as a good day if I remember to zip my fly."

Doooh! Thaks for reminding me but it's to late now beause it's bedtime.

7 posted on 05/19/2002 9:09:48 PM PDT by fella
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To: Dallas
Memory sticks are getting very inexpensive this year. Maybe a port can be developed so we can stick it in our ear. How handy, running short on memory? Just stick it in your ear, and instant memory.

Seriously, my family has early-onset Alzheimer's in our tree. Research in this area is getting very interesting. I know one day the answers will all come together and we'll say the answer was so simple how could we not see it? This family is very generous in allowing research to be conducted on them.

8 posted on 05/19/2002 9:16:05 PM PDT by bluesagewoman
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To: Dallas
once we have identified the molecule involved, the mechanism at the level of proteins coded by DNA, we can search for it in the Golfera family

They are could be off on another snipe hunt. What if memory isn't stored in the brain? Even though our manufactured computers have CPUs and memory chips, the brain may not be organized that way at all.

9 posted on 05/19/2002 9:19:39 PM PDT by RightWhale
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To: ImaGraftedBranch
And I thought I was special because I can remember back to before I was 2.
10 posted on 05/19/2002 9:28:21 PM PDT by Jeff Chandler
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To: ImaGraftedBranch
I have always wondered about people like your son. One question.... When they read something does the cognitive understanding run along with it? I mean yes they can recite but can they explain contexually what they have read? Just curious.
11 posted on 05/19/2002 9:38:17 PM PDT by Walkingfeather
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To: Walkingfeather
I always thought photographic memory was a fiction created by mystery writers.
12 posted on 05/19/2002 9:55:35 PM PDT by Ciexyz
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To: Walkingfeather
I have an excellent memory. I began reading at age 3 and my parents were surprised that I could remember what I read. I have also been a speed reader since high school and it has been frustrating trying to reassure people that you can both read fast AND comprehend.

Personally, I think it's important to USE your memory, otherwise it will atrophy. For example, instead of entering things in a Palm Pilot, remember it.

13 posted on 05/19/2002 9:56:15 PM PDT by Fracas
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To: Walkingfeather
Not all the time, unless it is obvious. I would also be derelict in my parental duties (and as a homeschooling family, my duties as his teacher) to let him simply absorb the information without proper perspective. We teach with multiple, practical examples, as well as actual examples from research.

I try not to let him learn a large body of information without multiple references -- it is important to let him read various points of view to test his abilities to discern bias from fact.

He and I have a thing going now where we watch/read the news throughout the day (breakfast, lunch and dinner, specifically) and try to be the first to catch any bias from reporters entering into the actual news report. He is amazed, stunned and a little more than concerned about how much we find on a daily basis.

He's got one heck of an imagination, which he is putting to work writing short stories in preparation for his desire to become a novelist.

14 posted on 05/19/2002 10:03:01 PM PDT by ImaGraftedBranch
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To: Dallas
Grandfather Bartolomeo, 82, was a star pilot during World War Two whose lightening memory put him ahead of the enemy.

... The only difficulty he had was remembering which side he was on.

+={)B^)

15 posted on 05/19/2002 10:04:50 PM PDT by Erasmus
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To: RightWhale
They are could be off on another snipe hunt. What if memory isn't stored in the brain? Even though our manufactured computers have CPUs and memory chips, the brain may not be organized that way at all.

Well, it's certainly north of the neck and south of the toupee. But you're right about one thing: It's not organized, at any level, anything like present-day computers.

16 posted on 05/19/2002 10:10:40 PM PDT by Erasmus
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To: Erasmus
Hasn't there been recent research indicating that thought processes are more diffused throughout the body than previously thought?
17 posted on 05/19/2002 10:35:35 PM PDT by Jeff Chandler
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To: Erasmus
I can't remember where I read that. Ironic, eh?
18 posted on 05/19/2002 10:36:11 PM PDT by Jeff Chandler
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To: Jeff Chandler
This week's mind theory or hypothesis is that the conscious mind is actually in the highly complex electromagnetic field surrounding the brain rather than in the neurons themselves. I suppose the EM field actually extends to include the entire body. Learned responses, according to this hypothesis such as playing a Lydian scale on your guitar without thinking about it are done automatically through hard-wired nerve memory and do not involve the consciousness except for the initial step of deciding to play the Lydian scale rather than the Dorian scale.
19 posted on 05/19/2002 10:44:17 PM PDT by RightWhale
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To: RightWhale
If consiousness is seperate from learned response, than how is it that acquired knowledge, properly synthesized, increases wisdom?
20 posted on 05/19/2002 10:52:24 PM PDT by Jeff Chandler
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