National Geographic Channel will shortly air “Breakthrough: Decoding the Brain”. As part of a virtual roundtable, Brain Blogger was selected to screen the episode and address the thought provoking question raised therein:
What if scientists were able to implant or erase memories for someone like those suffering from PTSD, this could be life changing, or do you think this is scientific innovation gone too far?
A flurry of arms, legs, grubby cheeks, whoops and giggles from three playful refugee children welcomed me as I emerged from the underground at Victoria square in Athens, Greece.
Exceptionally crowded, Victoria square has become one of the many parts of the city where a mere fraction of the thousands of refugees that arrive in Greece every day get stuck in transit through a danger-fraught migration through Europe, fleeing from life shattering circumstances in their home countries.
Scanning for a friend amongst the predominantly Afghani crowd of inhabitants temporarily occupying the tiny square I met the eyes of a little girl, no older than the spirited and sprightly kids that greeted me on arrival, and my heart sank. It broke.
Her eyes. So lifeless. So traumatized. Revealing little conscious awareness. My mind was literally suspended in the moment. Time seemed to stand still.
A mixture of emotions instantaneously surged inside me. Concern. Despair. Shame. Outrage.
In that very moment, acting on raw emotions, if I could have magically wiped the terrible memories from her mind I would have done it without hesitation.
Considering the recent breakthroughs in both implanting, manipulating and erasing memories in animal models, foreseeing a future where human memory manipulation technology exists that could be used to target specific memories is near inevitable.
Yet, manifesting modern technology from the realms of science-fiction is often fraught with previously unexplored ethical dilemas, no matter how noble the cause. Perhaps bringing memory manipulation tech into existence could do more harm than good to both the individual and society as a whole? Should we leave technologically tinkering with our memories well alone?
Putting the more practical technological challenges or the inevitable brainwashing abuse of such technology to one side, I invite you to participate in thought experiment to consider the potential negative consequences of bringing advanced human memory manipulation technology from science fiction into science fact.
THOUGHT EXPERIMENT:
If advanced human memory manipulation technology is developed for PTSD, what are the undesirable outcomes of using such technology?
Let’s take the concept of erasing memories that are associated with a traumatic event. There is one glaring potential problem with this. Erasing memories may result in further fragmentation of the self, altering ones identity and behavior, as is tragically found for neurological disorders and brain injury that involve memory loss.
Slight alterations in personality may be considered acceptable to some, as is generally the case found for personality changes that result from deep brain stimulation used to treat symptoms of Parkinson’s disease. Even if it does alter one’s personal identity, it makes us able to function is that not worth the risk?
However, the rapid, presumably unpredictable and potentially gross rewriting of self-identity that could be produced from memory-erasing technology, as opposed to the generally more gradual change of self that results from personal experience, is unexplored territory.
A related line of thinking is that erasing the traumatic memory may rob us of some of the documented positive outcomes of trauma and recovery from PTSD, such as the psychological protection from PTSD that some trauma surviving parents afford their children. Other positive outcomes of trauma include survivors developing new values, deeper relationships, an increased appreciation of life, and a greater sense of confidence and/or spirituality that may never have occurred if it were not for their traumatic memories.
However, this chain of thought becomes practically defunct if memory manipulation is specifically employed to treat the approximate third of PTSD cases that are currently considered to never fully recover using currently available therapies.
Digging even deeper, some researchers consider that the emotional strength of traumatic memories route them deeper in our subconscious, and so a conscious memory wipe would only be skin deep.
If memory manipulation was used instead of the erasing of memories these fragmentation, however, identify and loss of beneficial trauma outcomes problems could be avoided.
Currently, with successful experiments in rodents, there is scientifically valid reasoning behind the potentially priceless therapeutic potential of using tech to alter the emotional component of a traumatic memory, instead of erasing the memory itself.
Having evolved the ability to preserve emotionally serious memories to increase our chances of survival should mean, hypothetically, that an emotion-based memory manipulation technique would lessen the brain’s hold on the traumatic memories and allow the mental space for recovery.
One could argue that tampering with the emotions associated with a memory could leave us vulnerable to falling victim to similar circumstances, without emotional alarm bells ringing as loudly to alert us off danger signs. Ultimately, the marked similarity between using technology to alter the emotions mapped to traumatic memories to aid recovery, and the mechanisms involved in spontaneous healthy recovery from traumatic events takes the edge off of this line of thinking.
In those that successfully recover from a traumatic event, memories are recalled and reprocessed multiple times, resulting in the details of the memory becoming less and less accurate over time. This is not only true for the details of the event themselves, but is also true for the emotional aspect of the traumatic memories.
With PTSD, the emotional recall doesn’t lessen in the same manner, and instead pummels the individuals psyche by emotionally reliving the traumatic experience as the memory repeatedly resurfaces into conscious awareness. Essentially, memory tech could be used to mimic the therapeutic emotional changes to traumatic memories that occurs au natural.
While there are a lot of ifs involved, a little ingenuity and logic may be used to help bypass any foreseeable problems that could arise within the individual as a result of using memory manipulation technology. For future trauma victims like the girl I saw that day on Victoria square, furthering this technology could make the difference between a life of pain and suffering or recovery and growth.
In the end it us up to us, the people of now, to begin to compare the potential benefits of this technology for the individual to the potentially negative effects on society as a whole. What happens when we are granted the god-like power to potentially alter our memories when they are so integral to our identity, our consciousness, and the essence of what it means to be human…
The series premiere of “Breakthrough: Decoding the Brain” will air on Sunday, November 15, at 9 pm ET on National Geographic Channel.
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