Tuesday, June 10, 2025

Taking photos distances you from whatever you are photographing

Taking photos can impair your memory of events, BingUNews, June 9, 2025.

It is a common practice to photograph events that we most want to remember, such as birthdays, graduations and vacations. But taking photos can actually impair your memory of the experience, according to new research from Binghamton University, State University of New York.

Binghamton University graduate student Rebecca Lurie and Professor of Psychology Deanne L. Westerman sought to understand if taking a photo of an event or an experience impairs or improves memory. Previous research on this topic has used naturalistic settings, asking participants to photograph their trip to an art museum. The results of these studies were inconsistent, with some studies showing memory impairments and others showing improvements for photographed art. To gain better control of the experience, the researchers conducted five experiments involving a total of 525 University students in a controlled laboratory setting. The participants saw a set of artwork and were instructed to take a photo of some pieces using a camera on a tablet and to only look at the other pieces. Later, the researchers tested the participants’ memory of all of the artwork.

In all five experiments, photographed art was remembered more poorly than art that was merely viewed. This memory impairment for photographed art was found on tests given after 20 minutes and tests given after two days. The results also showed impaired memory for the visual details of the artwork as well as the overall theme, or gist, of the piece. “We often take photos of things that we especially want to remember; however, our work shows that by photographing something, you are making it less likely that you will remember it later,” said Lurie. “It is possible that participants may be relying on the camera to remember the photographed information for them, resulting in impaired memory for photographed information.”

The researchers note an important caveat in that they did not allow participants to review their photos, and so their findings only apply to a situation in which you take a photograph and never look at it again (which is probably the case for most of the photos stored on our phones).

This seems consistent with my own practice, though I almost always review the photos I take. Why? Because I take them with a camera and with the intention of posting some of them to the internet.

But then, in what way are these findings with my experience when my experience differs from that in the experiment in one important respect? Because it's obvious to me that taking photos puts you at one remove from whatever it is that you're photographing. When you take a photo, your attention if on the act of taking the photo. The act may be a relatively simple one, especially why you're taking it with a phone, but it is still something you have to attend to. You may be more focused on the act than you woud be on whatever it is you are photographing.

H/t Tyler Cowen.

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