The Nuance

How Short Information Breaks Help Your Brain

New research on ‘cognitive replay’ underscores the problem of information overload

Markham Heid
Elemental
Published in
4 min readFeb 16, 2022

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Photo by Ben Tofan on Unsplash

People in the radio business call them “buttons.” They’re those short music clips you hear in between news segments on NPR and other stations.

Bob Boilen, former director of NPR’s All Things Considered, once talked about these music interludes in an interview with the American Journalism Review. He called them “a breath in the show … a place to either think about something you just heard or get you to the next place.”

Boilen was on the money, maybe more so than he realized.

Since the publication of a landmark 1989 study in the Journal of Neuroscience, experts have recognized that the sleeping brain likes to run through its recent experiences and that this “replay” supports learning and memory. More recently, they figured out that replay also takes place while we’re awake.

When you experience something new and potentially useful — for example, you hear an interesting story on the radio — your brain will immediately replay this experience, at 20x speed.

This replay process is mostly unconscious and automatic. It takes place in the hippocampus, which is the part of…

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Markham Heid
Elemental

I’m a frequent contributor at TIME, the New York Times, and other media orgs. I write mostly about health and science. I like long walks and the Grateful Dead.