"Deciphering the Neural Code: How Our Brains Convert Sight to Stored Memories"

1 min read
Source: The Register
"Deciphering the Neural Code: How Our Brains Convert Sight to Stored Memories"
Photo: The Register
TL;DR Summary

Researchers from Dartmouth College have published a study in Nature Neuroscience indicating that the brain may use a "retinotopic" code, which is visual information encoded via the retina, to store memories, challenging the previous belief that the brain converts visual signals into a non-visual format for memory storage. Through fMRI experiments, they found a direct relationship between the brain's sensing and memory areas, with an "opponent suppression" dynamic suggesting a central role for retinotopic coding in memory. This discovery has implications for understanding memory in individuals with different cognitive abilities and could potentially inform treatments for memory-related diseases.

Share this article

Reading Insights

Total Reads

0

Unique Readers

0

Time Saved

2 min

vs 3 min read

Condensed

83%

58298 words

Want the full story? Read the original article

Read on The Register