This finding suggests that
impaired retrieval of
memories, rather than poor storage or
encoding, may underlie this prominent symptom of early Alzheimer's disease and points to the synaptic connectivity between
memory cells as being crucial for retrieval.
According to Riken, the finding suggests that
impaired retrieval of
memories, rather than poor storage or
encoding, may be behind the hallmark
memory loss associated with early Alzheimer's disease, and points to the synaptic connectivity between
memory cells as being crucial for the retrieval of
memories.