• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

Natural Upscaling ability of the brain.

Does your brain upscale memories?

  • Yes

    Votes: 3 60.0%
  • No

    Votes: 2 40.0%
  • Can't tell really.

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    5

Braznor

Diamond Member
Upscaling is now ubiquitous in games and videos. But this feature has long been present in our brains in a natural manner.

Case in point: I have recently been on a nostalgia trip, trying to track down the videos and audio jingles I had seen and heard in my childhood days.

Now that I'm revisiting the media I had experienced when I was in childhood, it seems that my memory of these videos and audio jingles are better than what these media were in original. It's almost as if my memories are the enhanced versions of the original source.

Does your memory of an old jingle sounds better and different than the original source material?

Do you remember old video games? I find that my memories of them have better graphics than those games did in reality. My revisit of these games often turn out to be bitter disappointments as I find myself jaded by these old graphics while my memories had upscaled version of these graphics.

I guess it works only when there is a sufficient temporal distance between the viewing of a media and one's memories of it. The greater the time duration between one's viewing of a media and one's memories, the higher the upscaling provided by the brain. Try remembering an old jingle you had last heard in your childhood and revisiting today, I'm sure you will find your memory of them is often better than what they originally were.

Does your brain possess this natural upscaling feature?
 
Yes. This is normal. Your brain assumes past 'events' were similar to modern 'events' so it merges the two to save on resources. Easy example, go watch old video game FMVs (blizzard's for instance, if you were into their games). The videos are good, but dated, compared to what you remember in your head.
 
Yes, upscaled my childhood memories from 240p (B&W) to 2160p (BT.2020 color, Dobly Vision/HDR10), and the results are wonderful to recall. 😀
 
Last edited:
I think OP is over-complicating matters.

When you haven't seen anything better, you assume what you have seen is the best. If you live in a place that doesn't get foreign visitors, your idea of female beauty is limited to the local women. Then you visit abroad and end up in some multi-cultural place and every day, you see someone who redefines your idea of beauty.
 
Does your brain possess this natural upscaling feature?
I wouldn't call it upscaling. Those are happy memories. Reminiscing about them transports me back to feeling THAT much happy. Nothing to do with the visuals or anything. To feel the same happiness, I would need to go back and be the exact same person to experience the authenticity of that happiness. My memories define what made me happy back THEN. What makes me happy NOW may be a LOT more different.
 
I don't think so. Not exactly per se anyway. I think I look back with the enthusiasm of the time, which doesn't account for technological progress. Take a game like Doom. It looked amazing when it came out, but the graphics are pretty shit today. I remember it as I first saw it, not in comparison to modern games.
 
Now that you mention it, that is so true. I sometimes go on a nostalgia trip sometimes too felt the same way. Especially jingles, actually. Or old commercial songs etc.

Also video games. The graphics always look way more primitive than I remember them. It's fun to go back through those memories though.
 
I actually have more of a problem with "modern" pixelated 2D/3D games than old ones. Why Minecraft looks blocky as crap STILL, is a mystery to me and why people put up with it, is an even bigger mystery. You can't convince me to play that crapfest, no matter what you say to me. It's massively unappealing to me and if I had to spend $1 to get it, I would mourn the loss of $1.
 
Pixel art has become trendy. I'm not a big fan, but it does let devs concentrate on gameplay over graphics. I don't game enough to know if I can get immersed in a pixel art world.
 
I'm not a big fan, but it does let devs concentrate on gameplay over graphics.
Problem is, they overdo it. I've seen DOS games that looked so much better than what the latest trending pixel crap I see on Steam with Overwhelmingly Positive reviews. I feel terribly sorry for the developers of those abandonware DOS games who missed out on millions and probably aren't even around to re-release their game now to enjoy the fruits of their labor.
 
Back
Top