Yale study shows infants' brains can form memories earlier than thought, challenging long-held beliefs about infantile ...
Why don't we remember our early years? For a long time, it was believed that infants lacked the ability to remember. Recent ...
Mice are one of the species that we know experience infantile amnesia. And, thanks to over a century of research on mice, we have some sophisticated genetic tools that allow us to explore what's ...
Why don't we remember our early years? For a long time, it was believed that infants lacked the ability to remember. However, ...
Our earliest years are a time of rapid learning, yet we typically cannot recall specific experiences from that period—a ...
Amnesia can impact memory recall, the formation of new memories, and independence. Learn about its types, causes, symptoms, ...
MRI scans show that the brains of infants and toddlers can encode memories, even if we don’t remember them as adults.
A new fMRI study reveals that babies as young as 12 months can encode memories, contradicting theories that memory formation ...
“The hallmark of [episodic memories] is that you can describe them to others, but that’s off the table when you’re dealing ...
Why don’t we remember specific events during those crucial first few years, when our brains worked overtime to learn so much?
Challenging assumptions about infant memory, a novel functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study shows that babies as ...