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Radiolab, Show 304: Memory and Forgetting

Series: Radiolab
From: WNYC
Length: 00:58:56

Radio Lab unravels the mystery of memory. What sticks. What doesn't. And why. Read the full description.
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Piece Description

According to the latest research, remembering is an unstable and profoundly unreliable process. It's easy come, easy go as we learn how true memories can be obliterated and false ones added. And Oliver Sacks joins us to tell the story of an amnesiac whose love for his wife and music transcend his 7 second memory.

Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Rat What is a memory? Science writer Jonah Lehrer tells us is it's a physical thing in the brain-- not some ephemeral flash. It's a concrete thing made of matter. And neuroscientist Joe LeDoux, who studies fear memories in rats, tells us how with a one shock, one tone, and one drug injection, you can bust up this piece of matter, and prevent a rat from every making a memory. LeDoux's research goes sci-fi, when he and his colleague Karim Nader start trying to erase memories. And Nader applies this research to humans suffering from PTSD.

Adding Memory We start this section off with a question from writer Andrei Codrescu: "where do computers get their extra memory from" And then we take it literally. Can you add memories? Professor Elizabeth Loftus says yes. She's a psychologist in the department of Criminology, Law and Society at the University of California at Irvine, and her research shows that you can implant memories--wholly false memories--pretty easily into the brains of humans. Her work challenges the reliability of eye-witness testimony, and is so controversial that she once had to call the bomb squad. Then, producer Neda Pourang brings us the story of finding a lost memory. Painter Joe Andoe incessantly paints huge canvasses of seemingly random images: horses, pastures, and - more recently - a girl with a particular about-to-say-something look on her face. He didn't realize until recently that he'd been painting a day from his past, a fragment of an afternoon 30 years earlier.

Clive The story of a man who's lost everything. Clive Wearing has what Oliver Sacks calls "the most severe case of amnesia ever documented." Clive's wife Deborah tells us the story, along with Oliver Sacks. And they try to understand why amidst so much forgetting, Clive remembers two things: Music and Love.

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Review of Radio Lab, Show 304: Memory and Forgetting

Exploring memory in this edition of Radio ab with Jad & Robert, has never been so fascinating...or hallucinogenic. Many engaging stories are told:

a wife whose husband has no memories past a few seconds and how music brings it back

how memory is constructed by the barin

how memory is deconstructed by science.

All told in RadioLab's curious Krulwichian, like Ken Nordine on caffeine, like a David Mamet verbal habit.

I was nearly worn out by the last stretch of the program, but the journey was still intriguing.

RadioLab is an experiment gone right, doing what radio can do best: tell stories in new ways, and this hour on memory has some transcendent moments that make the frentic narrative, all the more worth the listen.

Play this one at noon any week day, and then repeat it at night... a week night or a Sunday evening.

Broadcast History

NOTE Programs in the TWO most recent seasons of Radiolab are available for broadcast to NPR member stations until a new season is posted. Broadcast rights to earlier seasons and programs, including this one, may be obtained by contacting Israel Smith at ismarketing@yahoo.com. Stations may not air earlier season prior to obtaining rights.

Non NPR stations MUST contact Israel Smith at ismarketing@yahoo.com or NPR Station Relations prior to broadcast of any Radiolab programs to obtain rights.

Timing and Cues

TRT 58:59
*Breaks: Two 1:00 minute Station ID Breaks.
There is music under the break.

Segment A: 00:00 - 21:27
Incue: (Production Element) "You are listening to Radio Lab"
Outcue: "Radio Lab will continue in a moment."

First ID Break 21:27 - 22:27

Segment B: 22:28 - 41:10
Incue: "This is Radio Lab. I am Jad Abumrad."
Outcue: "We will continue in a moment."

Second ID Break 41:10 - 42:10

Segment C: 42:10 - 58:59
Incue: "Ready?" "Mmm-hmmm." "This is Radio Lab..."
Outcue: "End of Message."

Related Website

http://www.radiolab.org