It's not that you don't have memories from infancy — it's that you simply can't access them later in life, new research shows ...
The parts of the brain that are needed to remember words, and how these are affected by a common form of epilepsy, have been identified by a team of neurologists and neurosurgeons at UCL.
In a study supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), researchers revealed the structural underpinnings of memory formation across a broad network of neurons in the mouse brain.
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Discover Magazine on MSNWhy Can't We Remember Our Memories as a Baby, if we Make Them?Delve into the most recent research in infantile amnesia, which suggests that we do make memories as babies, despite not ...
A new study reveals that memory-related brain activity continues to shift even after learning, challenging traditional views ...
A new study has identified brain regions crucial for remembering words and how they are affected in people with temporal lobe epilepsy.
Researchers have revealed the structural underpinnings of memory formation across a broad network of neurons in the mouse ...
Scientists have long thought that babies can’t form experiential memories. Turns out, they can. Adults just can’t remember them.
Though we learn so much during our first years of life, we can't, as adults, remember specific events from that time.
“The hallmark of [episodic memories] is that you can describe them to others, but that’s off the table when you’re dealing ...
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