Babies encode memories, but they’re unable to recall them later in life, a new study shows. This finding offers insight into ...
Even though babies are constantly learning, their memories of specific events seem to vanish. For years, scientists thought ...
“The hallmark of [episodic memories] is that you can describe them to others, but that’s off the table when you’re dealing ...
A new fMRI study reveals that babies as young as 12 months can encode memories, contradicting theories that memory formation ...
Untangling the functional organisation of a brain region crucial for memory and learning helps reveal how individual differences are linked to variations in recall ability, aging and dopamine receptor ...
New research challenges the idea that infants cannot form memories, showing that babies as young as 12 months old can encode ...
Though we learn so much during our first years of life, we can't, as adults, remember specific events from that time.
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 ...
The reason why we don’t remember being a baby revealed - Researchers at Yale suggest we can encode memories in our early ...
Why don’t we remember specific events during those crucial first few years, when our brains worked overtime to learn so much?
A new study reveals that memory-related brain activity continues to shift even after learning, challenging traditional views ...