Episodic memory is a person’s unique memory of a specific event, so it will be different from someone else’s recollection of the same experience.
Episodic memory is sometimes confused with autobiographical memory, and while autobiographical memory involves episodic memory, it also relies on semantic memory. For example, you know the city you were born in and the date, although you don’t have specific memories of being born.
Another step in the process of forming an episodic memory is called consolidation, which is basically baking the event into your long-term memory. This helps the memory become more strongly ingrained so that it is not lost if the brain suffers an impairment. Episodic memory can be affected by trauma, hydrocephalus, tumors, metabolic conditions such as Vitamin B1 deficiency, and neurological diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease.
The final process involves recollection. Recollection is a process that elicits the retrieval of contextual information pertaining to a specific incident. Sometimes a recollection from long-term memory is retrieved almost effortlessly, and other times it may need something to trigger it, such as a word, an image or even a smell.
Some examples of episodic memory:
Where you were and the people you were with when you found out about the 9/11 attacksYour skiing vacation last winterThe first time you traveled by airplaneYour roommate from your first year in collegeThe details about how you learned of a relative’s deathFearing water because you were knocked over by a wave at the beach as a childYour first day at a new jobAttending a relative’s 75th birthday partyNeighbors on the block where you grew upThe movie you saw on your first date with your wife
While episodic memory is an individual’s unique take on a particular episode — which will vary from the recollection of others who were at the same event — semantic memory is just the facts.
While a bride will recall the date that she was married — information that is not in question — her remembrances of the event are going to differ from those who attended the ceremony and even from those of the groom.
Researchers have noted that while these two forms of memory are separate, they do not necessarily operate completely independently. In 1972, Endel Tulving of the University of Toronto detailed the differences between episodic and semantic memory in his book, "Elements of Episodic Memory." He noted that semantic and episodic differ in how they operate and the types of information they process.
Tulving observed that forming a new episodic memory is affected by information in semantic memory. A memory must pass through the semantic memory before it can be cemented into long-term memory as an episodic memory.
Related:
10 Ways to Keep Your Mind Sharp6 Fun Ways to Sharpen Your Memory6 Foods That Are Good for Your Brain10 Things You Didn't Know About the BrainTop 10 Mysteries of the Mind