Digital Amnesia: We Remember Where to Find It, Not What It Is
In 2011, Columbia psychologist Betsy Sparrow made a startling discovery: the internet has fundamentally changed how we remember. We're not remembering less—we're remembering differently.
Take this trivia test. Some facts will be "saved to a folder"—some won't. Then we'll test what you remember.
Click "Start" to begin learning trivia facts
Answer as many questions as you can remember.
The internet isn't just a tool—it's become part of your memory system. This is called transactive memory: sharing cognitive labor with external sources.
Just as couples divide "who remembers what" (you remember birthdays, your partner remembers passwords), we now divide memory with computers.
When you save a phone number to contacts, bookmark a recipe, or screenshot instructions, your brain says: "No need to store this—I know where to find it."
Not necessarily. We're reallocating cognitive resources.
For important information, consciously decide to remember it. Say it aloud, write it down by hand, create associations.
Regular periods without internet access force your brain to rely on internal memory again, strengthening those pathways.
Explaining information to someone else requires deep processing and creates stronger memory traces than passive consumption.
Before Googling, spend 30 seconds trying to remember. Even failed attempts strengthen memory retrieval pathways.
We've evolved from memorizing facts to memorizing search strategies. Our ancestors knew hundreds of plants, animal tracks, and tribal histories by heart. We know how to find that same information in seconds.
The question isn't whether this is good or bad—it's whether we're aware of the trade-off.
Right now, your brain is deciding whether to remember this page... or just remember you can Google "digital amnesia" later.