Hippocampus Content / Hippocampus Content for ٺƵ en How Experience Changes Basics of Memory Formation /news/how-experience-changes-basics-memory-formation <p>New research from the University of California, Davis, shows that experience also changes the way our neurons become plastic and form new memories.&nbsp;</p> July 23, 2018 - 3:04pm Andy Fell /news/how-experience-changes-basics-memory-formation Using Virtual Reality to Identify Brain Areas Involved in Memory /news/using-virtual-reality-identify-brain-areas-involved-memory <p>Virtual reality is helping neuroscientists at the University of California, Davis, get new insight into how different brain areas assemble memories in context.&nbsp;In a study published Jan. 18 in the journal Nature Communications, graduate student Halle Dimsdale-Zucker and colleagues used a virtual reality environment to train subjects, then showed that different areas of the hippocampus are activated for different types of memories.</p> January 25, 2018 - 9:50pm Andy Fell /news/using-virtual-reality-identify-brain-areas-involved-memory Brain’s Hippocampal Volume, Social Environment Affect Adolescent Depression /news/brains-hippocampal-volume-social-environment-affect-adolescent-depression <p>Research on depression in adolescents in recent years has focused on how the physical brain and social experiences interact. A new University of California, Davis, study, however, shows that adolescents with large hippocampal volume were more, or less, susceptible to feelings of depression depending on how unsafe — or conversely — protected they felt in their home and community environments.</p> May 17, 2017 - 9:27am Karen Michele Nikos /news/brains-hippocampal-volume-social-environment-affect-adolescent-depression Memory Replay Prioritizes High-Reward Memories /news/memory-replay-prioritizes-high-reward-memories <p>Why do we remember some events, places and things, but not others? Our brains prioritize rewarding memories over others, and reinforce them by replaying them when we are at rest, according to new research from the University of California, Davis, Center for Neuroscience,&nbsp;published Feb. 11 in the journal <em>Neuron</em>.</p> <p>“Rewards help you remember things, because you want future rewards,” said Professor Charan Ranganath, a ٺƵ neuroscientist and senior author on the paper. “The brain prioritizes memories that are going to be useful for future decisions.”</p> February 11, 2016 - 3:42pm Andy Fell /news/memory-replay-prioritizes-high-reward-memories