Notable cases , six hyperthymesia cases have been confirmed in peer-reviewed articles, More cases had been identified by 2012, but are yet to be published. Price's case was originally reported by researchers from the
University of California, Irvine, Elizabeth Parker, Larry Cahill and
James McGaugh, and is credited as being the first documented case of hyperthymesia. Price can apparently recall every day of her life from when she was 14 years old: "Starting on February 5, 1980, I remember everything. That was a Tuesday." In March 2009, Price was interviewed for an article in
Wired magazine by
Gary Marcus, a cognitive psychologist at
New York University. Price gave her first interview in over a year for the UK's
Channel 4 documentary ''The Boy Who Can't Forget'', and spoke of the challenges of living with the condition. needed additional explanation: "Our work has pretty much concluded that differences in memory don't seem to be the result of innate differences, but more the kinds of skills that are developed." As the condition has become better known, more people claiming to have hyperthymestic abilities have emerged. In the aftermath of the 2006
Neurocase publication alone, more than 200 people contacted McGaugh; however, only a handful of cases were determined to be actual cases of hyperthymesia. The second verified case was Brad Williams, the third was Rick Baron, and in 2009, Bob Petrella became the fourth person diagnosed with hyperthymestic syndrome. The U.S. television program
60 Minutes featured actress
Marilu Henner in 2010 for her superior autobiographical memory ability. Henner claimed to remember almost every day of her life since age 11. The show was initially pitched as a story featuring hyperthymestic violinist Louise Owen, but the reporter
Lesley Stahl volunteered her friend Henner as having a similar ability. In 2012, reports emerged of H.K. Derryberry, a blind 20-year-old man who could clearly recall every day of the last nine years of his life. Derryberry had been born at 27 weeks, weighing just over and was in neonatal intensive care for 96 days. A
brain hemorrhage was the likely cause of
cerebral palsy, and his
premature birth brought congenital blindness. He told researchers that his memories are rich in detail, regardless of whether they are from years ago or yesterday. About 90% of his memories are in the first person, compared with an average of 66% in the general population. A team at
Vanderbilt University conducted a series of tests including a brain scan that was compared with 30 age-matched controls. His brain was smaller than average (probably a result of his birth at 27 weeks). His right
amygdala, however, was 20% larger, with enhanced functional connectivity between the right amygdala and hippocampus and in other regions. In 2016 HK's story was published,
The Awakening of HK Derryberry: My Unlikely Friendship with the Boy Who Remembers Everything, written by his mentor Jim Bradford. In the same year, UK's Channel 4 screened the documentary ''The Boy Who Can't Forget'', which examined the memory of 20-year-old Aurelien Hayman from
Cardiff, a student at
Durham University, who remembers practically every day of his life from the age of 10. When Hayman's brain was scanned by a team led by Professor Giuliana Mazzoni at the
University of Hull, whilst he was prompted to remember a series of dates, a series of "visual areas" of the brain were activated, with much greater speed than would be expected in normal brain function. Potential problems with total recall were illustrated. The documentary also featured Bob Petrella, whose memory has enabled him to catalogue the events from his "favorite days" into a large scrapbook. In March 2015, Markie Pasternak of
Green Bay, Wisconsin, was diagnosed as the youngest person to be living with HSAM. Born in 1994, Pasternak remembers every day of her life since February 2005. She was featured on
60 Minutes Australia in August 2016 with Rebecca Sharrock. In January 2016, painter and
polymath Nima Veiseh was featured by the BBC for his use of hyperthymesia to create paintings that were said to only be producible with vast memories of art pieces, although a paper published in the
journal Memory in 2022 claimed that having hyperthymesia does not increase one's
creative thinking. Veiseh claimed to remember almost every day of his life since he was 15 years old, and that his ability to synthesise time and an "encyclopedic knowledge of the history of art" enabled him to create wholly unique visions on canvas. In March 2016
NPR examined further Veiseh's exploration of time and the human experience through art. In 2017, Australian Rebecca Sharrock of
Brisbane became known as a person who claims to recall even circumstantial details of every day of her life from her 12th day of life onward. Discussing her hyperthymesia with
BBC World Service, Sharrock revealed she was supporting two research projects – one with the
University of Queensland and another with the
University of California – to understand how a greater knowledge of hyperthymesia can support
Alzheimer's disease research, particularly in repairing the degeneration of the
hippocampus. Scans conducted during the studies showed that Sharrock's brain exhibited a heightened connection between the conscious and sub-conscious parts of her brain, which may aid easier memory recall – in particular for events that took place earlier in life. In December 2017, a man named Joey DeGrandis was verified as having HSAM by James McGaugh and subsequently featured in an article in
Time magazine. In October 2018, it was reported that teenager Tyler Hickenbottom, who is an identical twin, had the condition, which allowed him to "remember every day of his life like it was yesterday".
Tim Rogers, an American video game developer and journalist, claims to experience the condition in several of his published works.
John Romero, a video game developer and co-founder of
id Software, has often said he has hyperthymesia, including in his 2023 autobiography,
Doom Guy: Life in First Person. In 2024, Emily Nash, an 18-year-old high school student with HSAM, was featured in a
CTV W5 story.
Fiction Books • In the 1942 short story "
Funes the Memorious" by
Jorge Luis Borges, the protagonist suffers a head injury after which he gains the ability to remember every detail of what he experiences, but comes to view this as a curse. • In the 1980 series
The Book of the New Sun by
Gene Wolfe, the protagonist remembers everything he has ever seen starting from infancy. He describes his memories as being so vivid that he is capable of re-living anything he has experienced whenever he chooses to do so. • In a 2011 manga by Kohske called
Gangsta, the main character, Worick Arcangelo, is said to have hyperthymesia, which he uses to help police identify murder victims. • In the 2015 novel
Memory Man by
David Baldacci, the protagonist, Amos Decker, has hyperthymesia. In the book, a mystery-crime scene-thriller with graphic scenes, Decker uses his perfect memory brought on by a traumatic hit in football to solve the murder of his wife and child, and the school shooting connected to it. Decker recalls his memories as a "DVR", just playing when it wants to, or being rewound and played forward by conscious thought. • In the 2021 romantic suspense series
Memento Mori by
C.S. Poe, the protagonist, Everett Larkin, has hyperthymesia. Larkin suffered a traumatic brain injury at the age of 18, leaving him with highly superior autobiographical memory (HSAM) but very poor short-term memory. He remembers events since his injury with perfect recall, and memories are often brought to the surface through "associations." Larkin uses his superior memory as a detective on the NYPD
cold case squad. • In the 2025 speculative fiction novel
The Strange Case of Jane O. by
Karen Thompson Walker, a New York City psychiatrist treats a hyperthymestic woman who has mysterious blackouts and hallucinations. • In the 2025 romance novel
The Survivor Wants to Die at the End by
Adam Silvera, one of the protagonists, Alano Rosa, has hyperthymesia and can remember even before he was born. He relives every moment he remembers including feelings, which in some instances cause him physical pain.
Film and television • In season 7 episode 12 of the series
House, M.D. is about a patient who has a temporary
paralysis and
creatine kinase. She has a "perfect memory" due to her hyperthymesia. It later concludes her hyperthymesia is the way her
OCD presents and that taking
SSRI to treat her OCD will dial down her hyperthymesia. • In the 2014 film
The Dark Place, the protagonist of the story, Keegan Dark, has hyperthymesia. Keegan uses it to solve the mystery at the heart of the story. His hyperthymesia memories are visually depicted in the movie as "screens" appearing to Keegan, often in an overwhelming and distressing manner. • In season 2 episode 2 of the TV show
The Blacklist a character involved in criminal banking enterprises identified herself as having hyperthymesia as a skillful trait to avoid leaving a paper trail for illegal activities. She provided the FBI agents in the episode with real examples by recitation of events of dates selected at random. Her skills seemed to be date oriented rather than triggered by "personal experience." •
Unforgettable (American TV series) • The 2015 South Korean TV series
Remember: War of the Son portrays a hyperthymestic lawyer who sought to prove the innocence of his father, who had been convicted and sentenced to death for the brutal rape-murder of a neighbour. • The 2020 South Korean TV series
Find Me in Your Memory portrays the love story between a hyperthymestic news anchorman and an actress with amnesia, connected by a past traumatic event. • In the TV series
Superstore, one of the characters, Sandra, has highly superior autobiographical memory, which occasionally ties into the plot. • In season 5 of the Canadian TV series
Flashpoint, a hyperthymestic man is abducted in order to steal the plans to a smart weapon system at a secure facility. • In the Indian crime thriller film
Maargan (2025), the character Tamilarivu has hyperthymesia. ==See also==