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Infantile Amnesia: New Research Unveils Early Memory Encoding in Infants
news
neuroscience
In a groundbreaking study conducted by Yale researchers, it appears that infants as young as 12 months are capable of encoding memories. This challenges the long-held belief that infantile amnesia—the common inability to recall memories from the first few years of life—is due solely to a lack of memory formation. Instead, this phenomenon may arise from difficulties in memory retrieval, raising new questions about our understanding of early memory development.
#Infantile Amnesia
#Memory Development
#Early Childhood
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