Prøve GULL - Gratis
Rewriting memory, with good intent
Los Angeles Times
|December 29, 2025
In his lab, a scientist manipulates neurons in mice. That could help humans one day.
THE "goal of all of this is to restore health and well-being to an organism," neuroscientist Steve Ramirez says.
We often think of memories like the contents of a museum: static exhibits that we view to understand the present and prepare for the future.
The latest research, however, suggests they are more like well-thumbed library books that wear and change a little bit every time they're pulled off the shelf.
Think of one of your happiest memories. For real. Sit with the recollection. Let your mind's eye wander around the scene. See if you can feel a spark of the joy or hope you felt at the time. Let a minute pass. Maybe two.
If you played along with this experiment, you are physically different now than you were a few minutes ago.
When you began to reminisce, brain cells dormant just seconds before began firing chemicals at one another. That action triggered regions of your brain involved in processing emotions, which is why you may have reexperienced some feelings you did at the time of the event.
Chemical and electrical signals shot out to the rest of your body. If you were stressed before you began this exercise, your heart rate probably slowed and stabilized as levels of cortisol and other stress hormones decreased in your blood. If you were already calm, your heart rate may have quickened with excitement.
In either case, regions of the brain that light up when you get a reward jittered with dopamine.
The memory changed you. But by pulling this memory to mind, neuroscientist Steve Ramirez says, you also changed the memory.
Some elements of the memory heightened in importance. Others receded.
Your brain snipped out and inserted details without your conscious knowledge.
The mood you were in at the time of reminiscence left emotional fingerprints on the memory, as neurons activated by your mental environment synced up with those activated by the recollection.
Denne historien er fra December 29, 2025-utgaven av Los Angeles Times.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Real-life hostage tale doesn't delve deep
‘Wire,’ from Et]
4 mins
January 08, 2026
Los Angeles Times
Iconic blimp is worth the ride
Re \"Inflated? Absolutely. Overhyped? Not a chance,\" Dec. 29
1 min
January 08, 2026
Los Angeles Times
Ole Miss, Miami to battle in game like no other
Fiesta Bowl to feature teams whose viability, deservedness fueled controversy in circles.
2 mins
January 08, 2026
Los Angeles Times
Another severe flu season already is upon us
U.S. infections are still surging in a repeat of last winter’s epidemic, and health officials say the situation is likely to get worse
3 mins
January 08, 2026
Los Angeles Times
A striking pivot to 'outward imperialism'
[Trump, from A1]Court has only facilitated Trump's expansion of unitary executive power.
4 mins
January 08, 2026
Los Angeles Times
Musk’s AI floods X with sexualized images, study finds
Elon Musk’s X has become a top site for images of people who have been non-consensually undressed by artificial intelligence, according to a third-party analysis, with thousands of instances each hour throughout a day earlier this week.
4 mins
January 08, 2026
Los Angeles Times
Greg Kwedar and Clint Bentley discuss making 'Train Dreams' and their inspirational trip to the Idaho panhandle
WITH DIRECTOR CLINT BENTLEY ON THE road promoting “Train Dreams” and his co-writer Greg Kwedar on set shooting his next film, the pair decided to pass reflections on writing the script back and forth.
3 mins
January 08, 2026
Los Angeles Times
EPA to reluctantly restrict a chemical in drinking water
The Environmental Protection Agency on Monday said it would propose a drinking water limit for perchlorate, a harmful chemical in rockets and other explosives, but also said that doing so wouldn't significantly benefit public health and that it was acting only because a court ordered it.
3 mins
January 08, 2026
Los Angeles Times
Getting back in rhythm of life
Musicians affected by last year's fires found some relief from the MusiCares charity.
6 mins
January 08, 2026
Los Angeles Times
Hybrids won't move the needle
Re \"Hybrid sales surge in a recalibrated market,\" Dec. 30
1 min
January 08, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
