Baycrest

BrainMatters - Spring 2022

Baycrest Health Sciences & Baycrest Foundation Publications

Issue link: http://baycrest.uberflip.com/i/1463319

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 18 of 31

BrainMatters • Spring/Summer 2022 • 17 As we get older, we tend to experience a decline in our everyday memory. Fortunately, there are ways to combat this. Dr. Morgan Barense is the new Dr. Max and Gianna Glassman Chair in Neuropsychology, a joint position at Baycrest and the University of Toronto. She and her team have created a smartphone-based app, the HippoCamera, to boost everyday memory in individuals at risk for Alzheimer's disease. The HippoCamera aims to mimic memory encoding and retrieval performed by the hippocampus, a region of the brain that is critical in supporting our memories. The app is easy to use and has only two buttons: record and replay. First, the record function targets memory encoding, that is, what happens in the hippocampus when we first experience an event and "learn" a memory. This function includes recording a short video as well as a verbal description of the event, which are then turned into powerful memory cues. Second, the replay function helps users "study" their memories by replaying these cues. Early research demonstrates that when users capture one memory per day and replay their memory cues once per day using the HippoCamera, they remember close to 50 per cent more details from events. HELPING OLDER ADULTS BETTER REMEMBER E VENTS • Throughout the day, ask yourself, "What is the most important event that happened to me today?" • Remind yourself why the event is important and link it to other events in your life. • Take a picture or video of the event, and look at it later to trigger your memory. TIPS TO REMEMBERING EVENTS The HippoCamera is not yet available to the public as it is being tested and refined. However, Dr. Barense shares the following advice and tips for older adults to improve their memory on their own: "The most important tip I can give is to live life with the intention to remember the events that happen to you," says Dr. Barense.

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

view archives of Baycrest - BrainMatters - Spring 2022