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posted by martyb on Friday May 13 2016, @06:14PM   Printer-friendly
from the memories dept.

Imagine if we could enhance good memories for those suffering from dementia and wipe away bad memories for people with post-traumatic stress disorder.

Researchers have taken a step toward the possibility of tuning the strength of memory by manipulating one of the brain's natural mechanisms for signaling involved in memory, a neurotransmitter called acetylcholine.

Brain mechanisms underlying memory are not well understood, but most scientists believe that the region of the brain most involved in emotional memory is the amygdala. Acetylcholine is delivered to the amygdala by cholinergic neurons that reside in the base of the brain.

[...] For a new study published in the journal Neuron , researchers used a fear-based memory model in mice to test the underlying mechanism of memory because fear is a strong and emotionally charged experience. They used optogenetics, a newer research method using light to control cells in living tissue, to stimulate specific populations of cholinergic neurons during the experiments.

Two findings stand out. First, when they increased acetylcholine release in the amygdala during the formation of a traumatic memory, it greatly strengthened memory—making the memory last more than twice as long as normal. Then, when they decreased acetylcholine signaling in the amygdala during a traumatic experience, one that normally produces a fear response, they could actually wipe the memory out.

"This second finding was particularly surprising, as we essentially created fearless mice by manipulating acetylcholine circuits in the brain," Role says.

Sounds reminiscent of how they erased memories in the Philip K Dick film adaptation, Paycheck.

[Acetylcholine has been implicated in addiction to alcohol and nicotine; see, for example, Alcohol and nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (abstract) and full article (pdf) -Ed.]


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 13 2016, @06:41PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 13 2016, @06:41PM (#345773)

    On the face of it, this sounds like a reasonable thing to do, no? But think further: it'll be used in no time to erase 'unhappy' thoughts in anyone with the right amount of money. Hopefully, those specimens, lacking the instructive unhappy memories, and thus unable to learn from their mistakes will self-select and destroy themselves. ("Hey, I don't remember jumping in front of a running vehicle is what crushed me bones, let's try doing that")
    It'll also lead to a lot more self-centered, self-important idiots a-la Trump remembering only how great they are/were/...: Look at how great *I* am... I know it's true because that's how I remember it...