Doctor Who at 60: The Doctor’s skills extend to wiping people’s memories. But does that ring a bell with real-world research?

By Stephen Kelly

Published: Saturday, 25 November 2023 at 09:00 AM


It has been 15 years since Catherine Tate’s fan-favourite Donna Noble left Doctor Who. Perhaps you remember it like it was only yesterday, which is something that can’t be said for Donna herself. David Tennant’s Doctor was forced to erase her memories of their time together, lest her puny human brain burn out from too much Time Lord knowledge. You may be shocked to hear, however, that there are doubts over Doctor Who’s scientific rigour. 

“We don’t know the ultimate capacity for human memory,” says neuroscientist Dr Dean Burnett, author of Emotional Ignorance: Lost and Found in the Science of Emotion.

“No one’s lived long enough to fill it, for a start. If you did replicate the human senses in a computer and stored everything that you got from a live feed, it would fill up a hard drive pretty quickly. But that’s not how memories work. We don’t remember every single element of every experience we have of every waking moment. Our brains are a lot more discrete.”

Nevertheless, the idea of wiping someone’s memory isn’t entirely implausible, points out Burnett. 

“I think if you ran a powerful enough electric current through the main storage regions of the brain, then that would scramble things,” he says. “How you would do that safely – to the point where you don’t lose vital memories, or the ability to remember new things – is another matter though.” 

The idea that you can eliminate specific memories – à la the Doctor – is a far more fantastical concept, however. 

“We can’t look at someone’s brain and say, ‘Okay, here’s a memory of when they got their first bike’,” says Burnett.

“The best we could do is to look at someone’s brain in a scanner to see what parts are activated when they think of that bike. And even then it’s tricky because your frontal lobe, which is retrieving the memory, will be active, but there’ll be lots of different parts of the brain being triggered simultaneously too.

“In one part may be the memory for ‘bike’, and in another part is ‘childhood, 1987’. The memory is not in one location. That’s why it’s so difficult.”