Does stress affect your memory?
You spend weeks studying
for an important test. On the big day, you wait nervously as your teacher hands
it out. You’re working your way through, when you’re asked to define
‘ataraxia.’ You know you’ve seen it before, but your mind goes blank. What just
happened? The answer lies in the complex relationship between stress and
memory. There are many types and degrees of stress and different kinds of
memory, but we’re going to focus on how short-term stress impacts your memory
for facts. To start, it helps to understand how this kind of memory works. Facts
you read, hear, or study become memories through a process with three main
steps.
First comes acquisition: the
moment you encounter a new piece of information. Each sensory experience
activates a unique set of brain areas. In order to become lasting memories, these
sensory experiences have to be consolidated by the hippocampus, influenced by
the amygdala, which emphasizes experiences associated with strong emotions. The
hippocampus then encodes memories, probably by strengthening the synaptic
connections stimulated during the original sensory experience. Once a memory
has been encoded, it can be remembered, or retrieved, later. Memories are
stored all over the brain, and it’s likely the prefrontal cortex that signals
for their retrieval. So how does stress affect each of these stages? In the
first two stages, moderate stress can actually help experiences enter your
memory. Your brain responds to stressful stimuli by releasing hormones known as
corticosteroids, which activate a process of threat-detection and
threat-response in the amygdala. The amygdala prompts your hippocampus
to consolidate the stress-inducing experience into a memory. Meanwhile, the
flood of corticosteroids from stress stimulates your hippocampus, also
prompting memory consolidation.
But even though some
stress can be helpful, extreme and chronic stress can have the opposite effect.
Researchers have tested this by injecting rats directly with stress hormones. As
they gradually increased the dose of corticosteroids, the rats’ performance on
memory tests increased at first, but dropped off at higher doses. In humans, we
see a similar positive effect with moderate stress. But that only appears when
the stress is related to the memory task— so while time pressure might help you
memorize a list, having a friend scare you will not. And the weeks, months, or
even years of sustained corticosteroids that result from chronic stress can
damage the hippocampus and decrease your ability to form new memories. It would
be nice if some stress also helped us remember facts, but unfortunately, the
opposite is true.
The act of remembering
relies on the prefrontal cortex, which governs thought, attention, and
reasoning. When corticosteroids stimulate the amygdala, the amygdala inhibits,
or lessens the activity of, the prefrontal cortex. The reason for this
inhibition is so the fight/flight/freeze response can overrule slower, more
reasoned thought in a dangerous situation. But that can also have the
unfortunate effect of making your mind go blank during a test. And then the act
of trying to remember can itself be a stressor, leading to a vicious cycle of
more corticosteroid release and an even smaller chance of remembering.
So, what can you do to
turn stress to your advantage and stay calm and collected when it matters the
most? First, if you know a stressful situation like a test is coming, try
preparing in conditions similar to the stressful environment. Novelty can be a
stressor. Completing practice questions under time pressure or seated at a desk
rather than on a couch, can make your stress response to these circumstances less
sensitive during the test itself. Exercise is another useful tool. Increasing
your heart and breathing rate is linked to chemical changes in your brain that
help reduce anxiety and increase your sense of well-being. Regular exercise is
also widely thought to improve sleeping patterns, which comes in handy the
night before a test. And on the actual test day, try taking deep breaths to
counteract your body’s flight/fight/freeze response. Deep breathing exercises
have shown measurable reduction in test anxiety in groups ranging from third
graders to nursing students. So, the next time you find your mind going blank
at a critical moment, take a few deep breaths until you remember ataraxia: a
state of calmness, free from anxiety.
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