The Synapse to Self: The Neuroscience of Self-Identity
It has long been believed that "you are what you remember." Autobiographical memories are central to how we construct self-identity and experience a sense of self-continuity. They figure prominently in every aspect of our lives: earliest childhood recollections, developmental milestones and achievements, personal loss and public tragedy, and the breakdown of these memories across the lifespan. Conversely, self-identity plays a key role in how memories are selectively encoded, retrieved, or forgotten.
Although these complex relations are far from being understood, neuropsychology and neuroscience research are illuminating the neural regions and networks underlying autobiographical memories and self-related processing. In this course we will examine neuropsychological research looking at how the loss of autobiographical memory impacts the integrity of identity, such as in cases of amnesia and Alzheimer's disease.
We will also discuss how different memory systems support self-continuity and the capacity to "mentally time travel" back to the past and into the imagined future. We will examine how shifts in self-identity alter the accessibility of our memories and in turn our social and emotional functioning. Emphasis will also be placed on autobiographical memory and self-identity disturbances associated with mental illness, and the way in which neuropsychologists and neuroscientists study these changes following therapeutic interventions.
Psychology courses
- Babies, Birds and ’bots: An Introduction to Developmental Cognitive Science
- Child and Adolescent Development
- First-Year Studies: Child and Adolescent Development in North American and African Contexts: Opportunities and Inequalities
- Children’s Friendships
- Children’s Health in a Multicultural Context
- Children’s Literature: Developmental and Literary Perspectives
- Crossing Borders and Boundaries: The Social Psychology of Immigration
- Cultural Psychology of Development
- Environment, Race, and the Psychology of Place
- First-Year Studies: The Developing Child: Perspectives from Experience, Observation, and Theory
- Gender Research Seminar: Focus on Men and Masculinities
- Individualism and/or Diversity Reconsidered
- Introduction to the Theory of Social Representations
- Landscapes of Injustice: Psychology and Social Change
- Memory Research Seminar
- Mindfulness: Neuroscientific and Psychological Perspectives
- Narrative Neuropsychology
- Pathways of Development: Psychopathology and Other Challenges to the Developmental Process
- Personality Development
- Puzzling Over People: Social Reasoning in Childhood and Adolescence
- Social Thinking
- The Changing Self: Narratives of Personal Transformation
- The Empathic Attitude
- The Feeling Brain: The Biology and Psychology of Emotions
- Theories of Development
- Theories of the Creative Process
- The Psychology of Religious Experience
- The Synapse to Self: The Neuroscience of Self-Identity
- Trauma, Loss, and Resilience