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Infantile Amnesia

All articles tagged with #infantile amnesia

neuroscience2 years ago

Unveiling the Secrets: The Persistence of Your Earliest Memories

Research on rats suggests that our brains may still store memories of our earliest experiences, even though we cannot recall them. A study from Trinity College Dublin has found that a mother's immune system plays a role in moderating access to these memories, a phenomenon known as infantile amnesia. The study, which involved immunological models of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) in mice, revealed that male offspring of mothers who had an immune response during pregnancy showed signs of social behavior deficits and remembered fearful events for longer periods. The research suggests that a small immune protein called cytokine IL-17a may be key to this process. Understanding the mechanisms behind infantile amnesia could have important implications for education and medicine.

neuroscience2 years ago

Unraveling the Link Between Autism and Childhood Memories

Neuroscientists at Trinity College Dublin have discovered that the altered brain state associated with autism prevents the usual loss of memories formed during infancy, shedding light on the connection between childhood memories and maternal immune responses. Using a mouse model, the researchers found that exposure to maternal immune activation safeguards against developmental memory loss by impacting the function of memory cells in the brain. The study also revealed that forgotten memories from infancy can be permanently reinstated if the correct memory cells are activated in adults. These findings suggest that infantile amnesia is a retrieval deficiency rather than a loss of stored memories, and have implications for understanding memory and forgetting in child development and autism.

neuroscience2 years ago

Cracking the Code: Autism's Link to Childhood Memories

Researchers have discovered a link between maternal immune activation during pregnancy and the preservation of memories formed in infancy, challenging the understanding of infantile amnesia. In a mouse model, inflammation induced during pregnancy altered brain development, preventing the usual loss of early-life memories. The study suggests that infantile amnesia may result from a retrieval deficiency rather than memory loss, as memories are stored but not normally retrievable. This research provides new insights into cognitive development, memory flexibility, and the potential implications for autism.