PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Brain study from UT Dallas uncovers new clues on how cues may affect memory

2014-12-03
(Press-News.org) A new study from the UT Dallas Center for Vital Longevity shows that the brain activity prior to seeing an item is related to how well it is later remembered.

In the study published online in NeuroImage, the researchers showed that receiving information about a pair of items before seeing them may affect how well they are remembered.

Moreover, the researchers also found that the activity in different areas of the brain was unexpectedly related to how the information was remembered.

"If you're interested in memory, you want to know the factors that are associated with it being worse as well as what makes it better," said Dr. Richard Addante, a senior lecturer in the School of Behavioral and Brain Sciences and lead author of the paper. "Knowledge of these factors can lead to developing ways to help improve memory."

The researchers used functional magnetic resonance imaging to look for activity in different areas of the brain as a participant decided which of two words or pictures would fit inside the other -- for example, a dog and a house. But moments before the taskparticipants were shown a cue -- an "X" if the items would be presented as words or an "O" if they would be presented as pictures. About 20 minutes later, outside of the MRI scanner, the participants were tested on how well they remembered the pairs of items.

"We found that the brain activity before people were presented with information predicted how well people ended up remembering that information on a later memory test," Addante said. "What was really interesting was that brain activity wasn't just predictive of if they remembered the information later, but how they remembered it."

Prior research suggested that seeing the cues would trigger more brain activity in the hippocampus and provide a better chance of remembering the information. Activity in the hippocampus during learning is generally associated with better memory. This study found the opposite.

Greater activity in the hippocampus before a participant saw the two items predicted that the subject was more likely to forget which items were in a pair. In addition, increased brain activity in the frontal and parietal cortices, areas usually associated with memory maintenance, predicted a greater likelihood that the subject would falsely identify items as previously paired even though they were not.

"We were initially only expecting pre-stimulus memory activity in the hippocampus, as indicated in previous studies, which we did," Addante said. "But when we turned our analysis to the whole brain, we found an extensive pattern of activity that also predicted aspects of later behavior."

The results suggest that how the brain prepares to study an event can affect how well it is remembered.

INFORMATION:

Other UT Dallas researchers involved in the study were Dr. Michael Rugg, director of the Center for Vital Longevity, and research fellow Dr. Marianne de Chastelaine. The research was funded through a grant from the National Institute of Mental Health.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study of deadly bat disease finds surprising seasonal pattern of infections

Study of deadly bat disease finds surprising seasonal pattern of infections
2014-12-03
The deadly fungal disease known as white-nose syndrome has spread to bat colonies throughout eastern North America over the past seven years, causing bat populations to crash, with several species now at risk of extinction. The devastating impact of this disease is due in part to the seasonal dynamics of infection and transmission, according to a new study led by scientists at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and published December 3 in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B. The researchers were surprised to discover that during the winter, when the bats are ...

CO2 warming effects felt just a decade after being emitted

2014-12-03
It takes just 10 years for a single emission of carbon dioxide (CO2) to have its maximum warming effects on the Earth. This is according to researchers at the Carnegie Institute for Science who have dispelled a common misconception that the main warming effects from a CO2 emission will not be felt for several decades. The results, which have been published today, 3 December, in IOP Publishing's journal Environmental Research Letters, also confirm that warming can persist for more than a century and suggest that the benefits from emission reductions will be felt by those ...

Warming reaches maximum 10 years after carbon dioxide emission

2014-12-03
Washington, D.C.--The climate warming caused by a single carbon emission takes only about 10 years to reach its maximum effect. This is important because it refutes the common misconception that today's emissions won't be felt for decades and that they are a problem for future generations. For the first time, a study conducted by Carnegie's Katharine Ricke and Ken Caldeira has evaluated how long it takes to feel the maximum warming effect caused by a single carbon emission. Their work is published in Environmental Research Letters. "A lot of climate scientists have ...

Growing cooperation: First the carrot, then the stick

2014-12-03
An adaptable strategy that intelligently and flexibly combines positive and negative incentives turns out to be the optimal approach for institutions to encourage the highest level of cooperation at the lowest cost, according to a new study published in the Royal Society journal Interface. "This study applies to many real-life situations, such as teachers incentivizing student efforts or governments seeking compliance with environmental regulations," says IIASA Evolution and Ecology Program Director Ulf Dieckmann, who led the study in collaboration with IIASA researchers ...

Macho stereotypes put off men as well as women

2014-12-03
Some men are being driven away from macho occupations like surgery and the Royal Marines because they don't feel that they are 'man enough', according to new research. The authors of a study published today in the British Journal of Psychology say this means that only individuals who see themselves as macho apply for and stay in such jobs, which helps explain why they remain an incredibly masculine domain. Although there is much evidence of the negative impact of gendered workplace stereotypes on women, far less attention has been paid to their effect on men. In a ...

The biology of anxious temperament may lie with a problem in an anxiety 'off switch'

2014-12-03
Philadelphia, PA, December 2, 2014 - Persistent anxiety is one of the most common and distressing symptoms compromising mental health. Most of the research on the neurobiology of anxiety has focused on the generation of increased anxiety, i.e., the processes that "turn on" anxiety. But what if the problem lay with the "off switch" instead? In other words, the dysfunction could exist in the ability to diminish anxiety once it has begun. A new report in the current issue of Biological Psychiatry by researchers at the University of Wisconsin at Madison suggests that deficits ...

Mediterranean diet linked to longer life

2014-12-03
The Mediterranean diet has been consistently linked with health benefits, including reduced mortality and reduced risk of chronic diseases, such as heart disease. It is characterised by a high intake of vegetables, fruits, nuts, legumes (such as peas, beans and lentils), and (mainly unrefined) grains; a high intake of olive oil but a low intake of saturated fats; a moderately high intake of fish, a low intake of dairy products, meat and poultry; and regular but moderate intake of alcohol (specifically wine with meals). Telomeres sit on the end of chromosomes (like ...

Overweight and obesity in pregnancy linked to greater risk of infant death

2014-12-03
An accompanying editorial says babies do best when mothers have a normal body weight before and during pregnancy. Women of childbearing age have a high prevalence of overweight and obesity. Previous analyses suggest that maternal obesity (body mass index (BMI) of 30 or over) is associated with increased risk of infant mortality, but results have not been consistent. So a team of researchers based in Sweden and the USA decided to test the theory that maternal overweight and obesity are associated with infant mortality by analysing over 1.8 million singleton births ...

Diagnosis targets in primary care are misleading and unethical

2014-12-03
Now come targets for six other conditions, including diabetes coronary heart disease, asthma and depression, writes Dr Martin Brunet, a GP in Surrey. "But the data on which they are based are flawed, and the approach incentivises potentially harmful overdiagnosis," he argues. Every practice in England has been told its diagnosis rate for each condition, estimated from practice data and the expected prevalence, he explains. The intention is to exert pressure on general practitioners to increase diagnosis rates, but he believes the principles behind such a policy need ...

Mediterranean diet associated with longer telomeres

2014-12-03
Boston, MA--The Mediterranean diet has been consistently linked with an array of health benefits, including decreased risk of chronic disease and cancer. Until now, no previous studies have examined whether adherence to this diet is associated with longer telomere length, a biomarker of aging. Researchers at Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) have found that greater adherence to the Mediterranean diet was associated with longer telomeres. These findings are published online in The BMJ on December 2, 2014. Telomeres, biomarkers of aging, are repetitive DNA sequences at ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

iPS cells from dish to freezer and back

Deep neural networks enable accurate pricing of American options under stochastic volatility

Collective risk resonance in Chinese stock sectors uncovered through higher-order network analysis

Does CPU impact systemic risk contributions of Chinese sectors? Evidence from mixed frequency methods with asymmetric tail long memory

General intelligence framework to predict virus adaptation based on a genome language model

Antibiotic resistance is ancient, ecological, and deeply connected to human activity, new review shows

Vapes, pouches, heated tobacco, shisha, cigarettes: nicotine in all forms is toxic to the heart and blood vessels

From powder to planet: University of Modena engineers forge a low-carbon future for advanced metal manufacturing

Super strain-resistant superconductors

Pre-school health programme does not improve children’s diet or physical activity, prompting call for policy changes, study finds

Autumn clock change linked to reduction in certain health conditions

AI images of doctors can exaggerate and reinforce existing stereotypes

Where medicine meets melody – how lullabies help babies and parents in intensive care

We may never be able to tell if AI becomes conscious, argues philosopher

AI video translation shows promise but humans still hold the edge

Deep ocean earthquakes drive Southern Ocean’s massive phytoplankton blooms, study finds

Without campus leftovers to pick through, the beaks of this bird changed shape during the pandemic

High-dose antibiotic does not reduce mortality in tuberculous meningitis

How many insects fly in the sky above the USA?

Could cheese protect your brain health?

Who faces more difficulty recovering from stroke?

Colliding galaxies create the brightest, fastest growing black holes at their center

New BrainHealth research reveals tradeoffs on sleep with cannabis use for chronic pain

Aging-US now on ResearchGate, enhancing visibility for authors and readers

'Molecular glue' stabilizes protein that inhibits development of non-small cell lung cancer

Mount Sinai Health System is recognized in 2025 Chime Digital Health Most Wired survey

From prey to predator: How carnivores spread beneficial fungi

Menopause symptoms may be frequent and have negative effects, according to female endurance athletes

US Congressmembers’ responses on X to mass shooting events differ along party lines

KAIST-UEL team develops “origami” airless wheel to explore lunar caves

[Press-News.org] Brain study from UT Dallas uncovers new clues on how cues may affect memory