Subtitles section Play video
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Aaron Jones: Alright ready?
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Elise Hu: So just to review, if I get it it'll turn green,
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and then if I miss a human subject — a human target — then it grunts.
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Jones: Yep.
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[grunt]
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[camera shutter]
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[camera shutter]
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[grunt]
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Hu: What?
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Jones: You have to remember to press the trigger.
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Hu: So much grunting.
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I can't —
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Sorry.
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We are exploring the future of the human body
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and what humans will be capable of in 2050.
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In this episode, memory boosting.
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How will super memory work?
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What will it mean when we can learn faster and remember better
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simply by zapping our brains a little bit?
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And what if someone can overwrite your memory and manipulate what's real?
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Let's find out in this episode of Future You, with me, Elise Hu.
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It is nighttime and we are in the Department of Psychology at the University of New Mexico
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and I'm gonna spend the night here, in this self-enclosed space, for two nights.
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One night without stimulation to my brain and then the second night with
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electrodes connected to my brain. And the reason why is because we're gonna see if
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my memory can be improved while I'm sleeping by zapping it.
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Vince Clark heads the Psychology Neuroscience Center at the University of New Mexico.
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Over the past few years he and his team have tested all sorts of ways to enhance our
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brains ability to learn and remember.
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In a multi-year study, funded by the U.S. military's research arm DARPA, they made this stunning discovery,
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if your brain gets zapped during a certain stage of sleep it boosts your
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memory of the day before. How well does this work?
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The researchers are letting me give it a try.
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Hu: Since this was originally designed for the military the
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mental task is a VR game involving shooting photos of human targets that
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appear in this desert scene.
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Jones: Ok, ready?
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Hu: Ok.
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Jones: Ok, here we go.
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Hu: So I'm looking for humans to move
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to take a photo of.
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Oh, oh, oh, wait what? Oh my gosh.
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Jones: Remember to move your head.
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Hu: Oh he grunted.
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At first, this is a struggle, but eventually I get the hang of it.
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Training complete. Time to go to bed.
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Okay I've brushed my teeth.
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The only way that I can even access the outside world is through this walkie-talkie.
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Otherwise I'm about to go to bed.
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So good night for night one. Good night for control night.
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I get tested on my memory tomorrow. Bye.
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When you close your eyes at night and drift off to sleep,
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your brain begins its work on memory consolidation
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through four stages of sleep.
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Slow-wave sleep — or deep sleep —
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helps your brain encode long-term memories.
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While you're sleeping, your brain reviews what happened during the day
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and it stores information that you received.
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The super slow oscillations in your brainwaves coordinate all this.
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Researchers found if they hook up your brain, record the slow waves,
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use some advanced math to extract the data,
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then program a system to stimulate your brain during slow-wave sleep,
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the process of storing your memories is noticeably better.
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Research subjects who got stimulated at night
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have better recall of what they learned the night before.
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It's about seven o'clock.
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They just woke me up with a walkie-talkie.
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So after the first night, I'm tested on this task to get a base of what my memory is like.
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This will get compared to my stimulated brain tomorrow.
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This is gonna be really quiet without the grunts.
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[camera shutter]
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To pass the time before night two, we took in a little Albuquerque.
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The sunsets makes for memories worth boosting.
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Then back in my PJs. This time, the researchers attach
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electrodes to my head so they can read my brain signals while I sleep.
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Here's my tail.
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One more time on the VR game before an overnight memory stimulation.
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The researchers have to keep the brain bonnet nice and fitted for the night
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so it can correctly read when I'm in deep sleep.
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Sleeping in a lab with a bunch of wires attached to my head
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is rough, but once I fell into that slow-wave sleep
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they stimulated my brain cells with something called tACS
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— transcranial alternating-current stimulation.
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The technique figures out my brain's frequency for memory encoding,
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and then feeds that same current back into my brain to enhance my memories.
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Videographer: Are you in bed?
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Hu: Yeah.
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Videographer: Ok, I'm coming in.
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Hu: Good morning.
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Bye bonnet. This is the key VR test. After brain stimulation,
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will my performance improve? Will my brain have learned something, either
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explicitly or subconsciously, to make me better at recognizing targets?
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Jones: So let me orient you to the graphs first.
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So the figure on the left is your performance from your first day.
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Hu: Before we find out, let's put our memory expert and neuroscientist, Vince Clark,
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through our scenarios for how this plays out in the year 2050.
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What is going to be superhuman about us if we can accelerate our learning and our memories in this way?
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Vince Clark: There will be technologies that will allow you to learn things better,
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store them better, recall them better later, things like that.
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They already exist today. It's just a matter of making it even more effective
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and easier to use and inexpensive.
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Once you encode memory it's really hard to forget.
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And that's probably the reason why we're able to do it because your brain is
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actually designed not to encode a memory until you're really sure it's true.
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And what we're doing is by boosting that process a little bit we kind of reduce
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the threshold that you need in order to be able to encode the memory.
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Hu: Yeah let's talk a little bit about that. What are super-villain uses of this?
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So, you know, Lex Luther gets this. How is he gonna use this?
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Clark: So if he can manipulate how people dream at night,
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or how people come up with their stories and
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consolidate their memories —
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Hu: Will we have memory overwriting capabilities in the future?
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Clark: People are working on that too.
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It's possible that it could be misused and you could force someone
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to have a memory that wasn't really true somehow.
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Although it would take a lot more work than — what we're doing now is just enhancing a
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natural process. We're not really manipulating details about what you learned at all.
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But as we get better that might be possible.
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So memory manipulation, it sounds super scary
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if our heads can be messed with externally while we're sleeping.
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What do you imagine — so if this exists, how do you imagine society will respond?
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Have you thought this through?
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Clark: So I see different patterns of responses.
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My feeling is we're already doing it.
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Commercials are designed to change our
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feelings and our perspective about products or about things that we could
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spend money on. And they're very good at that. They can — a good commercial can
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change our culture. So we've been dealing with this for a long time.
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Hu: Well, what if a government wants to do that to promote nationalistic ideas or something though. Right?
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Clark: Right. Using medication too — I mean experiments with different kinds of medication.
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How do you make people placid? Things like that.
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Governments have looked at this for a long time.
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Hu: What do you expect, Dr. Clark, to be super likely given this technology?
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Clark: I think we'll get better at being able to
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enhance people's ability to learn. Also things like pay attention of doing
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sports and medical treatments like reducing pain. We already have ways using
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electricity and magnetism to do that.
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Hu: Alright. A very hopeful take. Thank you so much.
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How did I do? This surprises me, but somehow my performance improved.
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I couldn't explain how I came to hit the targets faster, but I did.
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I'm not a true scientific subject though. I'm just trying something that years of
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double-blind scientific research with hundreds of subjects bore out.
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What does this prove?
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Jones: That we can use transcranial stimulation during the night to improve other kinds
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of memory not just like, kind of veridical declarative sorts of memory.
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Hu: What the research found is stimulation improves memory generalization.
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My brain somehow did recognize a pattern that the threats appeared in
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and learned it with the help of tiny zaps to my head.
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Even if I couldn't explain the pattern out loud, the learning happened.
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Pretty cool. Right?
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Ok. Checking out. Checking out of the sleep lab.
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Oh. This way. Bye.
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Bye.
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So the possibilities for this — for learning new skills or just remembering better —
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are pretty huge. And get this, researchers are already finding evidence
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that they don't have to boost your memory while you're asleep.
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This is already working in some studies for those who are awake.
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How about that for the future you?
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We invite you to watch this whole series.
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You can watch it on NPR's channel on YouTube
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or at npr.org/futureyou.
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Ok. Bye.