in_the_media

The Makings of Our Earliest Memories

Media Outlet: 

New York Times

Do babies remember their earliest years? They can learn language; sorting out words and syntax from the surrounding noise is a defining human use of memory. Nora Newcombe, a professor of psychology at Temple, points out that there may be evolutionary reasons that this kind of memory — semantic — is so strong in the early years, when babies are faced with learning so many facts about the world.