Brain wave patterns shed light on how you make memories
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New research shows distinct patterns in waves of brain activity carry information when forming and recalling memories.
These waves form different shapes—spirals or concentric waves, for instance—and move in different directions based on what a person is doing.
They vary from person to person and according to task, show up as short but stable bursts of neural activity, and flexibly change their shape for encoding different types of behavior, such as memory encoding and retrieval.
Researchers have
These waves form different shapes—spirals or concentric waves, for instance—and move in different directions based on what a person is doing.
They vary from person to person and according to task, show up as short but stable bursts of neural activity, and flexibly change their shape for encoding different types of behavior, such as memory encoding and retrieval.
Researchers have
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