
All in the Mind Navigating the Pacific without technology
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Nov 25, 2025 Join Jane Aspell, a psychology professor, as she reveals how using an illusion of our younger selves can enhance memory recall. Hugo Spiers shares fascinating insights from navigating the Pacific with master sailors using only ocean swells, shedding light on traditional navigation techniques and their implications for understanding the brain. Daryl O'Connor discusses the power of self-affirmation to improve well-being and the surprising effects of repeated public health messages on brain engagement, offering innovative solutions for better communication.
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Childlike Face Trick Boosts Memory
- Jane Aspell's 'infacement' illusion makes viewers feel their face is their own by syncing movement with a childlike filter.
- That embodied sense helps people recall richer childhood memories by recreating bodily context encoded in those memories.
Host's Personal Infacement Experience
- Claudia Hammond tried the filter and felt the childlike face start to seem like her real reflection after moving with it.
- The experience immediately made a specific childhood holiday memory more vivid and detailed.
Change Repeated Health Messaging
- Avoid bombarding people with identical health ads because repeated exposure desensitises neural engagement.
- Vary, shorten, or change ad exposure to keep attention and valuation responses high.


