How hippocampal oscillations give birth to a memory. - Simon Hanslmayr

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  • Опубликовано: 15 июл 2024
  • On March 9th, 2021, Dr. Simon Hanslmayr was our guest speaker in the virtual colloquium series ‘Neurocognition & Work’. In his talk “How hippocampal oscillations give birth to a memory: Insights from human single unit recordings and computational modelling” he elaborates on the role of theta and gamma oscillations for episodic memory formation.
    Currently, Dr. Simon Hanslmayr is Professor of Brain Rhythms and Cognition and Head of the Cognition and Oscillations Lab at the University of Glasgow. For more information, see www.gla.ac.uk/researchinstitu...
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Комментарии • 2

  • @EightiesJames
    @EightiesJames 2 месяца назад

    I knew it.. It is only in deep Theta I've had 2 real-time playbacks @ ~36-37 years previously.
    For the who will never read this: For assistance dialing into deep long-term, try to remember how You encoded things then, and not the Fixed information (ex: misheard lyrics from childhood). You've gone way too far when you recall Far Past memories and dreams randomly, every day during waking hours,, or heavy ASMR (sometimes directionally controllable, sometimes internal like holding in a sneeze) from just looking at digits, or play 'pick a pathway'.
    Developing self-awareness at 2 is more haunting than it seems, trust me!

  • @nanotech_republika
    @nanotech_republika Год назад +2

    Awesome lecture