Scientists have found grandma's neurons to remember faces

07 July 2021, 15:10 | Health 
фото с NeBoley.com.ua

Scientists have found grandma's neurons for remembering faces Rockefeller University researchers have identified a small area in the temporal region of the brain that is involved in facial recognition. A new class of memory cells discovered.

American scientists have identified a class of neurons located in the temporal region of the brain that associate perception of faces with long-term memory. The results of this curious study are published by Science. For the first time, it explained in detail how our brains identify the faces of those who are dear to us, storing them in memory..

It is curious that among American scientists previously there was a joking phrase grandmother's neuron - a hypothesis of memorizing faces by separate cells for each face, which in reality cannot exist. And now, in the most poorly studied part of the brain, researchers have identified something similar to grandma's neurons - cells that connect the perception of faces with memory.. These neurons were first talked about back in the 1960s as brain cells that could code themselves..

It was claimed that one neuron exists for memories of the grandmother's face, another for the mother's face, and so on.. Even then, scientists were trying to solve the mystery of how the brain combines visual images with long-term memories.. Since then, many sensory neurons, specialized in processing facial information, have been identified, as well as memory cells designed to store data.. And now scientists have found neurons in the temporal region that react to previously seen faces more than to unfamiliar ones.. They should be called grandmother's neurons https: // www. medikforum. ru / Keywords:.

По материалам: medikforum.ru