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How the Brain Chooses What to Remember and What to Forget Long-term memory emerges from a sequence of molecular programs that sort, stabilize, and reinforce important experiences. Understanding these timers may allow researchers to bypass damaged brain regions and preserve memories in degenerative conditions. How the Brain Chooses What to Remember Every day, the brain takes fleeting experiences, moments of creativity, and emotionally charged events and turns them into lasting memories that help shape who we are and how we make decisions. A major question has been how the brain chooses which pieces of information to preserve and how long each one should remain. Recent research shows that long-term memories form through a series of molecular timing processes that unfold across different parts of the brain. Using a virtual reality-based behavioral system in mice, scientists found that specific molecular regulators guide memories along distinct paths, either strengthening them into more stable forms or allowing them to fade. Multiple Brain Regions Orchestrate Long-Term Storage The study, published today (November 16) in Nature, reveals that several brain regions work together to gradually transform new experiences into more permanent memories. Along the way, various checkpoints help determine which memories are important enough to be reinforced and preserved. “This is a key revelation because it explains how we adjust the durability of memories,” says Priya Rajasethupathy, head of the Skoler Horbach Family Laboratory of Neural Dynamics and Cognition. “What we choose to remember is a continuously evolving process rather than a one-time flipping of a switch.” Source:SciTechDaily @EverythingScience