Citation: Encoding study reveals how the brain uses past experiences to predict the unfolding of similar events over time (2025, March 4) retrieved 27 March 2025 from https://medicalxpress.com ...
MRI scans show that the brains of infants and toddlers can encode memories, even if we don’t remember them as adults.
A patient who sustained aphasia due to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis has regained the ability to communicate after receiving ...
"We wanted to investigate how the brain uses past, related events and experiences to build such expectations of future events ...
A patient with speech loss due to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) has regained her ability to communicate her feelings, ...
Though we learn so much during our first years of life, we can't, as adults, remember specific events from that time.
The National Institute of Information and Communications Technology (NICT) has revealed, through fMRI-based brain activity ...
A new study reveals that memory-related brain activity continues to shift even after learning, challenging traditional views ...
But no matter how hard you try, you can’t remember any of the details? It’s not that you don’t have memories from ...
The brain's ability to process information is known ... neural networks optimized for accurate encoding over long timescales may be less responsive to rapid changes in the input." ...
Infants can form memories, and they use a memory structure in the brain called the hippocampus to do it, researchers report in the March 21 Science. The results shore up the idea that memories can in ...