Why Your Teenage Years Feel More Real Than Last Year
The reminiscence bump is a documented phenomenon explaining why so many of our most vivid memories cluster around ages 15 to 25 — and what it reveals about how memory actually works.
5 articles
The reminiscence bump is a documented phenomenon explaining why so many of our most vivid memories cluster around ages 15 to 25 — and what it reveals about how memory actually works.
Spaced repetition beats rereading for long-term retention, and the science has been settled for over a century. Here's why most people still ignore it.
Your phone is brilliant at storing information, but that convenience may be quietly training your brain to remember less.
The next leap in AI is not smarter answers. It is better memory, tailored to you and controlled by you.
Discover why your mind clings to awkward memories, how this tendency protects us in social situations, and how to stop replaying moments that no longer matter.