Why don't we remember anything from when we were babies?

Almost no one has memories of very early childhood, but that is not because we are unable to bear such memories in our brain. In fact, this is because at that age our brain had not yet matured all its functions and it was not [...]
In fact, this is because at that age our brain had not yet matured all its functions and specifically had not measured information collection capacity in complex nerve patterns known as “memory”.
How, then, does a baby remember its mother?
Young children are able to recall facts and individuals at a given time, and this is called semantic memory. By the age of 2-4, children don't have a memory “idic” so they don't have a memory about specific details and events.
Such memories are stored in specific parts of the brain called “korcekse”, and for example, memorizing a voice is processed in sound cortex, visual memory in the visual framework. It's the part called the hippocampus that connects all the chips together.
According to Patricia Bauer of Emory University in Atlanta, the hippocampus is very well covered in the human brain and is responsible for collecting all information to form later a <x0buke” large and beautiful memories, but until the age of 2-4 the hippocampus has not yet begun to create fragments of information, and so children do not record any specific episodes until the age mentioned above.
Psychologist Nora Newcombe at the University “Temple” in Philadelphia states this.
On the other hand, according to psychologist, the episode memory will be unnecessary for a child is still learning how the world works.
According to him, the primary purpose of the first two years of life for a child is learning systematic knowledge, and episodeic memory would be a factor that would negatively affect this regard. /permothers/.












