Past neuroscience studies suggest that memories of events that occurred at short time intervals from one another are often connected, via a process referred to as memory linking. While memory linking ...
Our brains rarely record single memories - instead, they store memories into groups so that the recollection of one significant memory triggers the recall of others connected by time. As we age, ...
Our brains rarely record single memories—instead, they store memories into groups so that the recollection of one significant memory triggers the recall of others connected by time. As we age, however ...
Memories are like scenes in a movie, and the brain is an excellent video editor. Take a normal day as an example. A morning routine—shower, coffee, checking emails—is seamlessly cut into one ...
Suppressing the CCR5 receptor in brain cells helps restore memory after middle age; HIV drug 'Maraviroc' shows same efficacy as gene removal, UCLA researchers report in 'Nature'. Suppressing brain ...
This post was last updated August 4 at 7:43 p.m. UCLA researchers have discovered a molecular explanation that describes how the brain links multiple memories as well as a potential treatment for ...
A drug used to treat HIV aids may have another unexpected use. It appears to reverse a form of memory loss, at least in mice. NPR's Jon Hamilton reports that the finding suggests a new approach to ...
The study focuses on the way memories are formed in the human brain, which stores them as sets of related experiences rather than one-off recollections. This is why remembering one particular incident ...