3

2 0 0
                                    


At the conference, both the morning sessions were fantastic. The lecture on neural cryptology alone justified my hurried exit from the coffeeshop. Still, I was finding it unusually difficult to focus. Taking notes helped but not much. I kept replaying the coffeeshop scene and savoring the abrupt turn of events. My handsome stranger finally had a name, John—John Seton (and what a lovely name it was), and I couldn't imagine how our second encounter could have gone any better.

Nevertheless, I knew all the daydreaming was problematic. Each one had the potential—really, the certainty—of introducing errors. We think our memories are fixed, but they're not. Each memory replay becomes a distortion, or what the philosopher-statistician Nassim Teleb calls the memory revision machine—we remember the last time we remember the event—and, without even realizing it, we subtly change the story at every subsequent remembrance.

For example, in the story of my surprise morning encounter with John, let's say I begin with a memory of seeing his "blue eyes." That's a fact—his eyes are blue—no problem so far. However, on replay two—without even realizing it—perhaps I've subtly changed things such that now I have a memory of looking into his "stormy blue eyes." Then, on replay three, maybe I remember witnessing not only "stormy blue eyes" but also "stormy blue eyes that betrayed his desire!"

Each replay just keeps getting subtly better and better, because our memory machine is self-serving. We continuously rerun past events in a way that best fits our preferred narrative, and the more we prefer it, the more we remember it.

Consequently, because my own preferred narrative was to imagine that John somehow tracked me down to the coffeehouse—rather than it being another purely random event like our first meeting on the street—my thrice distorted replay with the "stormy blue eyes that betrayed his desire" was going to reverberate with me to the point that in the next replay the subtly slipped-in (and most probably imagined) "desire" is now taken as fact and becomes locked into my memory for all subsequent replays to further distort upon. As a result, by replay n+1 the stormy blue eyes are quite possibly now "undressing me" because that would be just the kind of self-serving distortion that reverberates (did it ever!)

Breathe, Sana, breathe.

Yes, the replays were problematic. That is not to say I didn't run a few (dozen). It's an innate reflex, and we all do it. The key was to be mindful of the memory revision machine and to counter it by making conjectures and running tests. For instance, if John did have an interest in me (the conjecture), then he will find me later, here at the hotel (the test). And people think mathematics doesn't have real world applications?

"Doctor Willoughby?" It was one the conference facilitators, Mr. Forrest. I'd met him at check-in. "You're on in ten, shall I escort you to the Mayfair room?"

"Oh, sure, yes." I'd really lost track of time inside my memory revision machine, though I hadn't lost my memory of defined facts, like the location of my presentation. "But I'm scheduled in the Piccadilly room."

"Yes, right, slight change in plans," he said, "but no worries." I slung my laptop bag over my shoulder and fell into step beside Mr. Forrest. "Seems the industrial and practical applications talks are rather popular this year."

He was referring to the topic track my presentation was in, Trend Tracking & Novelty Detection, that had, per the conference program, 'a focus on application strands led by industry to showcase the power of mathematical approaches in practical applications.'

"Really?"

"Yes, quite. We learned from Dr. Wells presentation on the bats which was SRO."

I fell into step beside Mr. Forrest, and off we marched toward the Mayfair room.

You've reached the end of published parts.

⏰ Last updated: Jan 18, 2019 ⏰

Add this story to your Library to get notified about new parts!

The Kali Algorithm (First Draft)Where stories live. Discover now