New research suggests that chemicals in the brain actively remove short-term memories.
And they speed up their work when faced with large amounts of information.
Memories need to be removed for new information to come in.
“But you need to remove memories for new information to come in.
“We’ve found that forgetting is an active process to remove memory.”
The findings could help scientists to understand how our minds store memories in the first place.
“We still don’t really understand … memory in terms of what is formed and what is erased,” Mr Zhong said.
“The study of forgetting may be a better way to identify the material basis of memory.”
The memories are erased by a protein in the body known as Rac.
When that protein is blocked, the brain retains information for far longer than it would normally.
But Rac is released faster when the brain is attempting to juggle large amounts of information, clearing more space as it is needed.
The study was conducted in fruit flies trained to avoid certain smells.
The flies forgot which odors to evade when confused by new information, the research published in the journal Cell, shows.
But when the scientists turned off the Rac protein the flies remembered the smells for much longer than they had previously, more than a day instead of just a few hours.
The researchers believe that memories could work in the same way for all organisms, and say there has been recent evidence of a similar pattern in mice.
Rac proteins have also recently been linked to intelligence in humans, they add.