Damage to prefrontal cortex compensated by intact areas, showing flexible nature of memory
Brain research over the past 30 years has shown that if a part of the brain controlling movement or sensation or language is lost because of a stroke or injury, other parts of the brain can take over the lost function – often as well as the region that was lost.
New research at the University of California, Berkeley, shows that this holds true for memory and attention as well, though – at least for memory – the intact brain helps out only when needed and conducts business as usual when it's not.
These results support the hypothesis that memory is not stored in one place, ...






