Hyperthymesia
Hyperthymesia
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Hyperthymesia

Hyperthymesia, also known as hyperthymestic syndrome or highly superior autobiographical memory (HSAM), is a condition that leads people to be able to remember an abnormally large number of their life experiences in vivid detail. It is extraordinarily rare, with fewer than 100 people in the world having been diagnosed with the condition as of 2021. A person who has hyperthymesia is called a hyperthymesiac.

American neurobiologists Elizabeth Parker, Larry Cahill and James McGaugh (2006) identified two defining characteristics of hyperthymesia: spending an excessive amount of time thinking about one's past, and displaying an extraordinary ability to recall specific events from one's past. The authors wrote that they derived the word from Ancient Greek: hyper- 'excessive' and allegedly thymesis 'remembering', although such a word is not attested in Ancient Greek, but they may have been thinking of Modern Greek thymisi 'memory' or Ancient Greek enthymesis 'consideration', which are derived from thymos 'mind'.

Individuals with hyperthymesia can recall extensive details of their own lives, along with public events that hold personal significance. They often describe their memories as uncontrollable associations: when presented with a date, they immediately "see" a vivid depiction of that day without conscious effort. These memories are strikingly detailed but not literal recordings of experience. In the case of Jill Price, anonymised as "AJ" in the 2006 study by Parker, Cahill and McGaugh, her recollections resembled a movie running in her mind, yet she could not remember incidental details such as what her interviewers were wearing hours earlier.

Although she describes her mind like having a movie running, she is not recording her world verbatim in its totality. One day after several hours together, she was asked to close her eyes and tell what her two interviewers were wearing. She was unable to do so.

Hyperthymesia differs from other forms of exceptional memory, which usually rely on mnemonic devices or rehearsal strategies. Hyperthymestic memories are overwhelmingly autobiographical, encompassing both significant and mundane events, and are encoded involuntarily and retrieved automatically. Although hyperthymesiacs may be able to recall the day of the week on which a date occurred, they are not calendrical calculators; their recall is constrained to lived experiences and thought to operate subconsciously.

Hyperthymesia is not classified as a form of autism, though certain similarities exist. Like autistic savants, some hyperthymesiacs develop an obsessive fascination with dates. Jill Price, the first documented case, differed notably from mnemonist Solomon Shereshevsky, described by psychologist Alexander Luria. Shereshevsky could deliberately memorise vast amounts of information, whereas Price could recall only autobiographical events and generally performed poorly at memorisation tasks. Hyperthymestic individuals may even have below-average memory for arbitrary information.[citation needed]

Another parallel drawn between Price and Shereshevsky is the role of synesthesia. Shereshevsky exemplified time-space synesthesia, and some researchers suggest superior autobiographical memory may be linked to this phenomenon.

Hyperthymestic abilities can have a detrimental effect. The constant, irrepressible stream of memories has caused significant disruption to Price's life. She described her recollection as "non-stop, uncontrollable and totally exhausting" and as "a burden". Price is prone to getting lost in remembering. This can make it difficult to attend to the present or future, as she is often spending time re-living the past. Others who have hyperthymesia may not display any of these traits, however.[citation needed]

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