British people remember modern historial
events but personal memories fade to grey.
The majority of British adults find it easier to remember details surrounding key historical events than significant moments in their own lives, including the death of a loved one or the birth of their first child – that’s the verdict of a compelling new research
project.
The study, which was commissioned to mark the launch of UKTV’s new history
channel Yesterday, was led by Professor Geoff Beattie who asked 300 people
to recall exact details of 32 personal and historical memories ranging
from their first kiss to the death of Princess Diana.
The research team then compared the group’s ability to recall their memories
of these events in detail. The results highlight the presence of ‘Flashbulb
Memories’ which are created during a personally significant or shocking
event of national or international importance and which often overshadow
memories of personal events.
The study found that news of the 9/11 attacks was remembered in extreme
detail by 82% of respondents compared to the birth of a first child, which
could only be recalled at the same level of detail by 65% of respondents.
The shocking events of 9/11 have ingrained themselves on the nation’s
memory to such an extent that 81% of participants could recall who told
them about 9/11, 84% remembered what time it was when they heard about
it, 92% knew where they were when they heard the news and 71% recalled
their ongoing activity.
This represents an extraordinary level of recollection after nearly eight
years. Memories surrounding Princess Diana’s fatal car crash are also
very strong, a surprising 62% of the participants could remember details
of exactly when they were told about the tragedy, who told them, where
they were and what they were doing at the time. This compared favourably
with many personal memories; 50% could recall their first child’s first
birthday and a mere 46% of the same group were able to recall significant
details about their first day at secondary school.
The study found that the 7th July London bombings also provided extremely
vivid ‘Flashbulb Memories’ for 58% of respondents, whereas only 38% of
people could remember their first major argument with their current partner
in the same level of detail.
The research suggests that time does not diminish memories of certain
momentous historical events. It may be almost 46 years since JFK was assassinated
but 52% of the respondents who were old enough to remember still had extremely
clear memories of that day, and can even remember where they were and
what they were doing when they heard the news. The study also highlighted
the least memorable events in recent history including Torvill and Dean’s
perfect score of 6.0’s for the Bolero at the 1984 Olympics with only 25%
of people being able to remember it with any clarity.
This was closely followed by New Labour sweeping to victory in the 1997
general election which could only be recalled in detail by 24% of the
study group. A similar number of people struggled to remember details
of Gary Barlow’s teary announcement when Take That split up in 1996 which
would suggest that the band are perhaps even more popular now than they
were back then.
Top five Flashbulb historical memories
- 9/11 – (82%)
- Princess Diana’s death – (62%)
- July 7th London bombings – (58%)
- The assassination of JFK – (52%)
- Boxing Day Tsunami – (41%)
Top five personal memories Death of a close relative
- (81%) Passing driving test
- (79%) First date with current partner
- (76%) Wedding day
- (72%) First kiss
- (66%)
The findings reveal the reason we’re able to recall some historical events
over and above personal memories is due to the way the human brain records
them. When a cultural event takes place, it triggers a primitive survival
mechanism which results in the memory being encoded so that it stays with
you until the day you die.
Professor Geoff Beattie from the University of Manchester says: “The
Yesterday Historical Study provides a fascinating insight into our recollection
of key cultural events many years after they’ve happened. While we’re
constantly reminded about personal milestones such as our wedding day
or our children’s birthdays through photographs or family gatherings,
we rarely talk about the big historical moments, and yet we remember where
we were, what we were doing, and even the exact time of day that we heard
about them with absolute clarity years afterwards.”
Richard Kingsbury, Yesterday’s Channel Head says: “The premise of Yesterday
is that world events and cultural memories we remember through television
are very much part of who we are. The surprising aspect of this research
is just how powerful these memories are. Yesterday will be a place where
we can re-live those moments and in doing so understand more about who
we are and what has shaped us.”
Date
4th March 2009
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