Missing Sleep may Hurt Your Memoryby Michigan State UniversityLack of sleep, already considered a public health epidemic, can also lead to errors in memory, finds a new study by researchers at Michigan State University and the University of California, Irvine.
New ‘Regulatory’ Function of Learning and Memory Gene in Brain Cells Identifiedby Johns Hopkins Medicine
NewsChimps and Bonobos Can Recognize Long-Lost Friends and Familyby University of California - BerkeleyThe research expands our understanding of long-term memory in animals and how it evolved
NewsLion’s Mane Mushrooms Shown to Promote Nerve Growth, Improve Memoryby University of QueenslandActive ingredient in Hericium erinaceus promote neuron projections
NewsNew Material Mimics Neural Activity Associated with Learning and Memoryby Holden GalushaNew technique in neuromorphic computing opens doors for studying neural processes and may establish new computing paradigm
NewsNew Study Shows that the Cerebellum is Key to Remembering Emotional Experiencesby University of BaselKnown for managing movement, the cerebellum has been shown to play a role in emotional memory storage
NewsHow the Smell of Food Can Enable ‘Time Travel’by Lancaster UniversityResearchers use food flavor to stimulate memory
NewsUsing Smartphones Could Help Improve Memory Skillsby University College LondonNew study shows that external memory tools are effective and do not cause “digital dementia”
NewsWild Bats Can Remember Sounds for Yearsby Smithsonian Tropical Research InstituteResearcher discovered that frog-eating bats could recognize ringtones indicating a food reward up to four years later
NewsThreatening Faces and Beefy Bodies Do Not Bias Criminal Suspect Identificationby University of CambridgeStudy finds that suspects with highly muscled bodies are most accurately identified by eyewitnesses in line-ups
NewsNew Research 'Sniffs Out' How Associative Memories Are Formedby University of California, IrvineUCI-led team is first to discover how the brain creates memories of delicious smells
NewsNew Tool May Help with Understanding Inaccuracy in Eyewitness Testimonyby University of TorontoNew tool will help researchers study how accurately we construct mental representations of visual experiences