A new review explores how episodic memories are formed, stored, and reshaped over time, revealing why our recollections of past events often change.
A recent neuroscience review questions the long-held belief that memories are unchanging records of past events.
Brainwave recordings revealed that successful remembering involved reduced alpha and beta activity alongside the reactivation ...
Neuroscientist Steve Ramirez has been doing exactly that in his lab at MIT, and his new book, How to Change a Memory, looks at what happens when memory becomes something we can actively shape. Ramirez ...
Contributor: Nina R. Eastes The idea of a “smarter brain pill” gets a lot of hype. But behind the buzz, a quieter story ...
A study from the University of East Anglia is helping scientists better understand how our brains remember past events - and how those memories can ...
In today's high-pressure professional environments, from national security to corporate leadership, memory is a strategic asset. Yet, despite its centrality to decision-making, 1 most modern ...