
Memory Makers
When experiences are linked to emotions – happy or sad – they tend to stick in the brain as memories more effectively than neutral experiences. This serves as a survival mechanism for humans and other animals because it encourages the avoidance of dangerous situations and the seeking of beneficial ones. In some people who have experienced the worst types of fear or pain, however, the memories are so bad they interfere with normal life – a condition called post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). To investigate how bad memories are encoded into the mammalian brain, researchers zapped the feet of mice (when the animals walked on part of their enclosure) and then examined which cells in the hippocampus – a memory-forming part of the brain – were activated (green). By investigating how these cells register and store such negative experiences, and how they might be manipulated, researchers hope to garner insight into potential therapies for PTSD.
Written by Ruth Williams
- Image from The Ramirez Group, Boston University
- Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Boston University, Boston, MA, USA
- Image copyright held by the original authors
- Research published in Current Biology, June 2019
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