Autobiographical memory  

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-'''Hyperthymesia''' is the condition of possessing an extremely detailed [[autobiographical memory]]. Hyperthymesiacs remember an abnormally vast number of their life experiences.+'''Autobiographical memory''' is a [[memory]] system consisting of episodes recollected from an individual's life, based on a combination of [[Episodic memory|episodic]] (personal experiences and specific objects, people and events experienced at particular time and place) and [[Semantic memory|semantic]] (general knowledge and facts about the world) memory.
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-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.+
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-The word ''hyperthymesia'' derives from [[Ancient Greek]]: ''hyper-'' ("excessive") and ''thymesis'' ("remembering"). Hyperthymesia is also known as '''hyperthymestic syndrome''' and '''highly superior autobiographical memory''' ('''HSAM''').+
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-==Appearance in fiction==+
-*Colin in [[Alan Garner]]'s 2012 book ''[[Boneland]]''.+
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-*[[Sheldon Cooper]] from the TV show [[The Big Bang Theory]] remembers everything from the day his mother stopped breastfeeding him. He recalls it was "a drizzly Tuesday".+
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-*[[Jorge Luis Borges|Jorge Luis Borges's]] short fiction "[[Funes the Memorious]]" tells the story of an Uruguayan peasant who cannot forget a single thing he sees or hears.+
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-*In the CBS television series ''[[Unforgettable (2011 TV series)|Unforgettable]]'', the main character Carrie Wells, played by [[Poppy Montgomery]], possesses superior memory capabilities that she uses to help solve crimes under investigation by the police. Her abilities are attributed to her having hyperthymesia.+
-* On the program [[Criminal Minds]], which is also a CBS series, the character [[Spencer Reid]] states on many occasions that he possess an [[Eidetic Memory]], which is often linked to hyperthymesia.+
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-*In the 12th episode of season 7 (''[[You Must Remember This (House)|You Must Remember This]]'') of ''[[House (TV series)|House]]'', Dr. House's patient is a waitress who has hyperthymesia.+
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-*On the Disney Channel series ''[[A.N.T. Farm]]'' the character Olive is able to remember every day of her life and everything she has ever heard seen or read, which is relatable to hyperthymesia.+
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-*Significant parts of the plot of ''[[Small Gods]]'' by [[Terry Pratchett]] depend on the hyperthymestic, [[eidetic]] memory of the monk Brutha. He remembers every moment of his life in perfect detail, down to the precise location and timing of individual footsteps. He cannot read, but he can nevertheless make perfect reproductions of documents from memory because he remembers the shapes of the letters. When he witnesses a disreputable action and is ordered to forget it, he does not understand the order as he has no concept of "forgetting". When asked what is the first thing that he can remember, he replies "There was a bright light, and then someone hit me".+
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-*Mike Ross (played by [[Patrick J. Adams]]) in the television series ''[[Suits (TV series)|Suits]]'' has a flawless memory and remembers everything he has read or seen with perfect detail, something he uses to bolster his career. He has a hyperthymistic, [[eidetic]] memory.+
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-*Disciple Manning, the main character in [[R. Scott Bakker]]'s novel ''Disciple Of The Dog'', also suffers from hyperthymestic syndrome which he characterizes as "simply [[irritable bowel syndrome]] of the head: where my dad can't dump his dumps properly, me, I can't dump my memories properly".+
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-*In the [[Mass Effect]] science-fiction video games, an assassin named Thane Krios appears. He, along with every other member of the alien race called drell, has near perfect recollection of everything that has ever happened in their life. This characteristic was developed in response to a hostile desert homeworld where the location of important resources like water or oases were scattered over enormous distances, and so, not knowing the specific location could mean death.+
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-*Margaret Peterson Haddix's young adult novel ''[[Escape From Memory]]'' features a land where people are trained from childhood to be hyperthymesic.+
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-*In the movie ''[[Limitless]]'', the lead character, Edward Morra, takes a drug which causes him to call back every memory he has ever had, which is similar to hyperthymesia.+
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-*In the French-Czech television series ''[[Crossing Lines]]'', the character Anne-Marie San says she has hyperthymesia and has been confirmed by medical tests to have an enlarged [[temporal lobe]] and [[caudate nucleus]].+
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-==See also==+
-*[[Daniel McCartney]]+
-*[[Eidetic memory]]+
-*''[[Funes the Memorious]]'', a short story by [[Jorge Luis Borges]]+
-*[[Savant syndrome]]+
-*[[Solomon Shereshevskii]]+
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Autobiographical memory is a memory system consisting of episodes recollected from an individual's life, based on a combination of episodic (personal experiences and specific objects, people and events experienced at particular time and place) and semantic (general knowledge and facts about the world) memory.



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