FORGETFULNESS
DEFINITION |
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Forgetfulness refers to the loss of memory. Memory loss
may result from two-sided (bilateral) damage to parts of the brain
vital for memory storage, processing, or recall (the limbic system,
including the hippocampus in the medial temporal lobe). |
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Forgetfulness can be a symptom of several
neurodegenerative diseases; however, people whose primary symptom is
memory loss (amnesiacs), typically remain lucid and retain their
sense of self. They may even be aware that they suffer from a memory
disorder.
People who experience amnesia have been
instrumental in helping brain researchers determine how the brain
processes memory. Until the early 1970s, researchers viewed memory
as a single entity. Memory of new experiences, motor skills, past
events, and previous conditioning were grouped together in one
system that relied on a specific area of the brain.
If all memory were stored in the same way, it
would be reasonable to deduce that damage to the specific brain area
would cause complete memory loss. However, studies of amnesiacs
counter that theory. Such research demonstrates that the brain has
multiple systems for processing, storing, and drawing on memory. |
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| FORGETFULNESS RELATED ITEMS |
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