1440 Findings

Hours of research by our editors, distilled into minutes of clarity.

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    Curiosity patterns can likely be explained by evolution

    Humans are curious creatures, but we are also selective about curiosity. Research suggests that evolution built in a drive to seek out new information, in case it becomes useful in future situations. Situations that are especially complex, or that are so simple we don't feel the need to question them, tend to pique our curiosity less.

  • Memories are formed through attention, repetition, and emotional significance

    Our brains create memories by taking in sensory input, filtering it through short-term memory, and storing it in long-term memory. Emotional events are more likely to become vivid, lasting memories because they activate stronger neural connections.

  • Long-term memory formation may not need short-term memory

    New research shows that long-term memories can still develop even when short-term memory formation is blocked, suggesting the brain uses separate pathways for short- and long-term memory. This discovery could help scientists open new avenues for treating memory loss in diseases like Alzheimer’s.

  • Memory exists as multiple types stored across various brain systems

    Memory isn't one uniform function—it's made up of multiple systems, like declarative (facts/events) and non-declarative (skills/habits), which involve different brain areas such as the hippocampus, amygdala, and cerebellum.

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