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aGHz | 5 months ago
Would you kindly provide some references? I'm very interested in this research as an armchair enthusiast, but in my own reading I've yet to find anything this confident.
aGHz | 5 months ago
Would you kindly provide some references? I'm very interested in this research as an armchair enthusiast, but in my own reading I've yet to find anything this confident.
mallowdram|5 months ago
https://bmcbiol.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12915-02...
In terms of NCC of memory, the papers beginning around the mid 2000s are seismic. The encoding and retrieval are subtly varied depending on the lab.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17425535/
Also the cohort studies are immensely helpful, dementia, Down's syndrome let us see the impairment.
aGHz|5 months ago
> Second, within LIPC, we found a gradient in which a more dorsal-posterior region was involved in SR, a mid region was involved in both SR and EE, and a more ventral-anterior region was involved in EE, but only when SR was high.
To me, these are merely clues about how the high-level pieces fit together, and there's a long road to actually understanding the neural correlates of memory.