Since the pandemic, do you find yourself forgetting what you're saying or doing? Don't panic, because, according to the British scientist Catherine Loveday, that's normal
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Since the pandemic, do you find yourself forgetting what you're saying or doing? Don't panic, because, according to the British scientist Catherine Loveday, that's normal. The researcher has been studying how our memories have been affected by recent events, and shared her first results during a UK radio show. It seems that people's sense of memory impairment could be related to how much they move around.
Since the pandemic, do you sometimes lose your words or forget something you were supposed to do? Rest assured, you're not alone. As part of her research, Catherine Loveday, a professor of cognitive neuroscience at the University of Westminster, has been studying this sense of memory impairment.
While many people—perhaps like you—may have had the feeling they were forgetting things, no one has sought quantified this phenomenon until now. The results of the study have not yet been made public. However, the scientist shared some of her findings on a BBC Radio 4 show. She explains how she used the "Every Memory Questionnaire" to subjectively assess how different facets of respondents' memories have been performing recently.
Sample questions include: "Did you forget to tell people something important?" and "Did you start reading something, only to realize that you've read it before?" In addition, respondents were asked whether they thought their memory had improved, stayed the same or deteriorated during the pandemic. The data collected by Catherine Loveday seems to confirm many people's impressions: 80% of the respondents said that at least one aspect of their memory had deteriorated.