A recent research on
human memory links sleep and memory in a powerful co-relationship.
Not exact matches
As sleep declined, rapid - eye movement, or REM — sleep
linked to learning and
memory (SN: 6/11/16, p. 15)-- came to play an outsize role in
human slumber, the researchers propose.
Recently, it was found that the
human hippocampus,
linked with learning and
memory, produces new neurons throughout life.
Linking observed
memory deficits to the PDE4A5 enzyme «suggests a potential target for alleviating the effects of sleep deprivation in
humans,» says neuroscientist Sam Deadwyler of Wake Forest University in Winston - Salem, North Carolina.
These techniques have allowed scientists to investigate mental operations in
humans, such as reading or
memory, and to
link these to activity in particular regions of the brain.
In
humans, hippocampal theta rhythm has been observed and
linked to
memory formation [1][2] and navigation.
Freeze,
Memory will present three different bodies of Charrière's work together for the first time, each exploring how
human civilization and the natural landscape are inextricably
linked.
These artworks also consider how the
human body acts as a vessel for — and mother to — the
memories, languages, and ghosts that
link past, present, and future.
But researchers writing in the journal Neuroscience found that
human behavior that is exceptionally flexible, responsive and capable of navigating complexity requires something beyond a strong and active prefrontal cortex: strong and agile runners must
link that seat to brain regions involved in perception,
memory, language and mobility.