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BioWorld - Monday, December 15, 2025
Home » Keywords » memory

Items Tagged with 'memory'

ARTICLES

Computer programming cards with numbers punched

At Glia 2025, searching for memories in the matrix

July 11, 2025
By Anette Breindl
No Comments
At first blush, the brain’s extracellular matrix (ECM) seems like the opposite of synaptic plasticity. Plasticity is the ability to change; the ECM is stable, to the point that it is often described as a scaffold – something to lend stability. “ECM proteins have some of the longest lifetimes of any protein in the brain,” Anna Molofsky told her audience at the XVII Meeting on Glial Cells in Health and Disease, which is being held in Marseille this week.
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Computer programming cards with numbers punched
Neurology/psychiatric

At Glia 2025, searching for memories in the matrix

July 10, 2025
By Anette Breindl
No Comments
At first blush, the brain’s extracellular matrix (ECM) seems like the opposite of synaptic plasticity. Plasticity is the ability to change; the ECM is stable, to the point that it is often described as a scaffold – something to lend stability. “ECM proteins have some of the longest lifetimes of any protein in the brain,” Anna Molofsky told her audience at the XVII Meeting on Glial Cells in Health and Disease, which is being held in Marseille this week.
Read More
Silhouette of head, brain
Neurology/psychiatric

Histamine receptors have role in fear memory retrieval

Aug. 9, 2024
Researchers from the Key Laboratory of Neuropharmacology and Translational Medicine of Zhejiang Province have gained new insights into the role of histamine receptors in fear memories.
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Man piecing together a puzzle
Neurology/Psychiatric

KIT-13, a novel plasmalogen analogue effectively improves memory dysfunction in mice

July 21, 2023
Plasmalogens are a type of phospholipid that play significant roles in membrane fluidity and cellular processes such as vesicular fusion and signal transduction. Previous studies with natural plasmalogens have shown their role in neuroinflammation and memory function improvement.
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Brain waves
ECNP 2022

ECNP 2022: Epilepsy is much more than seizures, studies suggest

Oct. 17, 2022
By Anette Breindl
“Epilepsy is really a classical neurological disorder,” Lars Pinborg told the audience at the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology (ECNP) annual conference on Sunday. “Or is it?” Pinborg, of Rigshospitalet's The Neuroscience Center in Denmark, was chairing a session dedicated to an alternative hypothesis, summed up in the session title: “Is epilepsy a psychiatric disorder?”
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Neuromodulation

Noninvasive brain stimulation improves memory

Aug. 23, 2022
By Nuala Moran
Noninvasive electrical stimulation of the brain for 20 minutes per session over four days has been demonstrated to improve both working- and long-term memory for at least one month, in people ages 65 to 88.
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Senior author Kay Tye and co-first author Hao Li. Credit: Salk Institute
Thanks for the good memories

Neurotensin codes for positive valence in associative learning

July 20, 2022
By Anette Breindl
In a sense, memories are useless without being linked to feelings. Without knowing whether a memory is good or bad, there is no way to seek out good experiences, and avoid bad ones. Now, investigators at the Salk Institute have identified neurotensin as a critical molecule for the assignment of such emotional valence.
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Brain-DNA illustration

Astrocytic ApoE mediates memory consolidation in mice

Jan. 28, 2021
By John Fox
A study led by scientists at the University of Science and Technology of China in Hefei City is the first to show that astrocytic apolipoprotein E (ApoE) regulates neuronal epigenetic states via reprogramming lipid metabolism, which was shown to control brain function, in particular memory consolidation, in mice.
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Man adding piece to brain
The long and short of it

Oncogene Ras affects memory consolidation

Jan. 21, 2020
By W. Todd Penberthy
Remember how Ras is a frequently mutated oncogene in solid tumors? Well, it turns out Ras plays a role in those memories, too. In the Jan. 13, 2020, online issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, scientists at the Scripps Research Institute in Juniper, Fla., reported on the discovery that Ras signals through Raf and then Rho kinase to control whether memory is short- or long-term.
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Man adding piece to brain
The long and short of it

Oncogene Ras affects memory consolidation

Jan. 17, 2020
By W. Todd Penberthy
Remember how Ras is a frequently mutated oncogene in solid tumors? Well, it turns out Ras plays a role in those memories, too. In the Jan. 13, 2020, online issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, scientists at the Scripps Research Institute in Juniper, Fla., reported on the discovery that Ras signals through Raf and then Rho kinase to control whether memory is short or long-term.
Read More

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