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Definition: Remote Memory refers to the ability of an individual to recall information, events, experiences, or knowledge about past incidents that occurred at a considerable geographic distance or in a different location. Explanation: Remote Memory is an essential component of human cognition and is closely related to long-term memory.
10 paź 2024 · In this Review, we discuss how events are perceived from a continuous stream of experience, and how perceived events organize memory for real-world experiences.
3 mar 2018 · In this review, we summarize these recent findings and attempt to identify the biologically plausible mechanisms based on which a contextual memory becomes remote by integrating different levels of analysis: from neural circuits to cell ensembles across synaptic remodelling and epigenetic modifications.
First, recent and remote memory can be studied prospectively by introducing manipulations at particular times after a scheduled training event. Second, studies in animals can provide insight into what occurs as recent memories gradually become remote memories (see [ 70• ] for a comprehensive review).
1 lut 2005 · However, recent studies have begun to shed light on how remote memories are organized in the cortex, and the molecular and cellular events that underlie their consolidation.
What is remote memory? Remote memory begins with the creation of traces in long-term memory circuits, initially involving short-term processes completed within seconds, minutes or at most days [1 ,2 ]. Traces that outlast these initial stages form the basis of what we call here remote memory.
Remote memory typically refers to memory for the distant past, measured on the order of years or even decades. It encompasses episodic (autobiographical), personal semantic, and general semantic memory involving historical people and events.