Cellular Memory: New Study Reveals Why “The Body Remembers”
Cellular memory is no longer a mystery: a study reveals that even non-brain cells can learn and remember information.
Cellular memory is no longer a mystery: a study reveals that even non-brain cells can learn and remember information.
Extraordinary research reveals how PKMzeta, anchored by the protein KIBRA, maintains stable synaptic connections of memory
Brain plasticity allows the brain to create and modify copies of memories. A study reveals other memory mechanisms.
Scientists have developed a method that, via electrical impulses to the brain, helps people recover memories and live better.
Forgetting as part of learning: Memories we think are lost forever may simply be inactive.
New research shows the vital role of breath in memory. Here's how it could lead to new treatments for cognitive decline.
The “sound signaling” method opens up the possibility of increasing or deleting the memory of specific elements. It sounded like science fiction.
Having an electrical "replacement" of the hippocampus will be a game changer for patients with memory loss due to brain injury or disease.
Are you ready for a world where memory is stored in a cloud? The scenarios of a future in which (unfortunately) we will not forget anything.
Since 2004, science has not been able to effectively repeat the incredible results of a study on the erasing of memories: today, however, it takes a good step forward.
A technique known as DecNef, born for the treatment of PTSD, has the potential to erase bad memories. And some risks.
No, it's not the remake of "If you leave me I'll delete you". An associate professor of psychiatry (with dismay) managed to erase the memories of 60 people.
According to DARPA statements, the group of volunteers who underwent brain implants ...