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A Sense of Self: Memory, the Brain, and Who We Are

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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.

ISBN-13: 9781324021834

Media Type: Paperback

Publisher: Norton - W. W. & Company - Inc.

Publication Date: 05-17-2022

Pages: 288

Product Dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.30(h) x 0.70(d)

Veronica O’Keane is professor of psychiatry and consultant psychiatrist at Trinity College Dublin, with over thirty years of experience in the field. She has published extensively in the academic literature and lives by the sea in Dublin, Ireland.

Table of Contents

Foreword vii

Part 1 How We Make Memories 1

1 Dawnings 3

2 Sensation: The Raw Ingredient of Memory 12

3 Making Sense 29

4 The Story of the Hippocampus 44

5 The Sixth Sense: The Hidden Cortex 65

6 A Sense of Place 87

7 Time and Experiencing Continuity 99

8 Stress: Remembering and 'Forgetting' 116

Part 2 How Memory Makes Us 131

9 Self-Recognition: The Start of Autobiographical Memory 133

10 The Tree of Life: Arborizations and Prunings 152

11 A Sense of Self 168

12 Sex Hormones and Songbirds 177

13 The Shifting Narratives of Life 191

14 False or True? 205

15 The Oldest Memories 217

Postscript 231

Notes 235

References 249

Index 261