
Ashley Romedro
Ashley Romedrgo | Historian & Temporal Analyst
Ashley Romedrgo is a multidisciplinary researcher specializing in anomalous historical patterns, chrono-psychological phenomena, and the intersection of theoretical physics with documented events. With a background in quantum history (PhD, University of Edinburgh) and applied temporal mechanics (MIT Research Fellow), her work focuses on identifying and interpreting chronological discontinuities across cultural records.
Her current projects include:
Leading the Global Anachronism Database at the Stanford Institute for Temporal Studies
Developing predictive models of cultural memory distortion for DARPA's Project Mnemosyne
Serving as principal investigator for the UNESCO Chrono-Heritage Initiative, preserving historical sites that exhibit temporal instability
Recognized by Nature as "the most original temporal thinker since Einstein," Ashley has published 27 peer-reviewed papers on topics ranging from WWII perception gaps to the neuroscience of precognitive deja vu. Her controversial 2023 TED Talk "When the Past Changes Back" has sparked international debate about humanity's collective memory.
When not tracking time anomalies, she advises tech firms on temporal UX design and curates the Museum of Fragmented History in Lisbon. Her bestselling pop-science book "The Clock That Broke: And Other True Time Crimes"* is available in 19 languages.
"History isn't what we remember - it's what we agree we've forgotten."
Ashley Romedrgo is a multidisciplinary researcher specializing in anomalous historical patterns, chrono-psychological phenomena, and the intersection of theoretical physics with documented events. With a background in quantum history (PhD, University of Edinburgh) and applied temporal mechanics (MIT Research Fellow), her work focuses on identifying and interpreting chronological discontinuities across cultural records.
Her current projects include:
Leading the Global Anachronism Database at the Stanford Institute for Temporal Studies
Developing predictive models of cultural memory distortion for DARPA's Project Mnemosyne
Serving as principal investigator for the UNESCO Chrono-Heritage Initiative, preserving historical sites that exhibit temporal instability
Recognized by Nature as "the most original temporal thinker since Einstein," Ashley has published 27 peer-reviewed papers on topics ranging from WWII perception gaps to the neuroscience of precognitive deja vu. Her controversial 2023 TED Talk "When the Past Changes Back" has sparked international debate about humanity's collective memory.
When not tracking time anomalies, she advises tech firms on temporal UX design and curates the Museum of Fragmented History in Lisbon. Her bestselling pop-science book "The Clock That Broke: And Other True Time Crimes"* is available in 19 languages.
"History isn't what we remember - it's what we agree we've forgotten."
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