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Peek was born in Salt Lake City, Utah[6] with macrocephaly,[5] damage to the cerebellum, and agenesis of the corpus callosum,[7] a condition in which the bundle of nerves that connects the two hemispheres of the brain is missing; in Peek's case, secondary connectors such as the anterior commissure were also missing.[5] There is speculation that his neurons made unusual connections due to the absence of a corpus callosum, which resulted in an increased memory capacity.[8][9] According to Peek's father, Fran (Francis) Peek, Kim was able to memorize things from the age of 16–20 months. He read books, memorized them, and then placed them upside down on the shelf to show that he had finished reading them, a practice he maintained all his life. He could speed through a book in about an hour and remember almost everything he had read, memorizing vast amounts of information in subjects ranging from history and literature, geography and numbers to sports, music and dates. Peek read by scanning the left page with his left eye, then the right page with his right eye. According to an article in The Times newspaper, he could accurately recall the contents of at least 12,000 books.
i think it is wild and kind of a cruel joke on us that it is a 'defect' or an 'illness' that causes a sweet memory like that.
originally posted by: intrptr
a reply to: Mugly
i think it is wild and kind of a cruel joke on us that it is a 'defect' or an 'illness' that causes a sweet memory like that.
I think humans retain lifes experience in memory, verbatim. Just that we don't have the kind of access he did due to a 'defect' (his filters were off). If we had that capacity it would cause problems too, mostly with spatial awareness and when to shut up or overlook little affronts to our person.
We will all carry our experience here, forever.
(imo)
well what is the point in retaining it if we can't access it?
no we can't… we can't do that
having a memory flood back from some cue is not the same thing at all.
According to an article in The Times newspaper, he could accurately recall the contents of at least 12,000 books.
can you explain to me how having a memory or a fact pop up after some sort of cue is the same as kim peek being able to recall facts like he does?
i mean sure, maybe the brain does store all these facts but another fact is we can not recall them whenever we want with accuracy and clarity like kim peek could.