How we “travel” in our past

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During our any “journey” into the past in the form of memories, the brain begins to function in a special rhythm, and this interested scientists.

Researchers at Vanderbilt University (Nashville, USA) during numerous patient observations have determined that our brain grabs memories not randomly, but glides by certain labels, sort of like folders and files in a computer.

The memories in our brains are managed by MTL – department mid-parietal lobe, with the front part responsible for upcoming events, and the back – for deep memories (real travel to the past).

Note by the way that many scientists of the world tend to believe that man does not store all these pictures of the past in his brain, they are somewhere outside our mortal body. In our brains these tags-tags – folders and files for extracting the information we need. And scientists of the University Vanderbilt indirectly confirmed this.

American researchers believe that their work has no only theoretical, but also purely practical significance, since the data obtained allow us to develop a treatment technique for many neurodegenerative disorders leading to memory impairment, say the same sclerosis or Alzheimer’s disease.

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