Infantile Amnesia In Children

Published

Previous research has verified that adults experience infantile amnesia, an inability to recall the earliest years of their lives. Now a new longitudinal study of 140 children ages 4 to 13 explores infantile amnesia in children.

In the study, children were asked to recall their earliest memories. Younger children showed more change in recalling earliest memories over time; older children showed more consistency in recalling earliest memories over time.

The inability of individuals to remember the very earliest years of their lives, called infantile amnesia, has been studied for many years in adults, who seem to recall very little before ages 3 or 4. But children also experience infantile amnesia, and a new study explores their experiences.

The study was conducted by researchers at Memorial University of Newfoundland.

In the longitudinal study, researchers asked 140 children ages 4 to 13 to describe their three earliest memories. Two years later, they asked the children again about their earliest memories.

The children were also asked to estimate how old they were at the time of each memory. Parents confirmed that the events happened and provided their own estimates of how old their children were at the time of the memories.

Children who were between 4 and 7 at the first interview showed very little overlap between the memories they recalled the first time and those they remembered two years later, suggesting that very early memories of young children are fragile and vulnerable to forgetting.

In contrast, a third of the 10- to 13-year-olds described the same memory as their very earliest when asked two years apart, and more than half of all the memories they provided were the same at both interviews.

According to study leader Carole Peterson, professor of psychology at Memorial University of Newfoundland in Canada:

“Younger children’s earliest memories seemed to change, with memories from younger ages being replaced by memories from older age. But older children became more consistent in their memories as they grew older.

As we lose those memories of those early years, years that we previously could recall, we’re losing part of our childhood – in essence, we’re losing all or almost all of those events that occurred to us then. So our ‘psychological childhood’ begins much later than our real childhood. And most or all of those events that previously were talked about, that caused laughter or tears, are no longer accessible if they occurred in our preschool years."

Carole Peterson, Kelly L. Warren, Megan M. Short.
Infantile Amnesia Across the Years: A 2-Year Follow-up of Children’s Earliest Memories.
Child Development, 2011; DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8624.2011.01597.x