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@riicaardoo007
Créditos a quien corresponda
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(Image caption: Synchronized neurons strengthen emotional memories. In the image, maps show synchronized neurons during memory creation (left) and memory retrieval (right). Credit: René Hen / Columbia University Irving Medical Center)
Why Are Memories Attached to Emotions So Strong?
Memories linked with strong emotions often become seared in the brain.
Most people can remember where they were on 9/11, or what the weather was like on the day their first child was born. Memories about world events on Sept, 10, or lunch last Tuesday, have long been erased.
Why are memories attached to emotions so strong?
“It makes sense we don’t remember everything,” says René Hen, PhD, professor of psychiatry and neuroscience at Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons. “We have limited brain power. We only need to remember what’s important for our future well-being.”
Fear, in this context, is not just a momentary feeling but a learning experience critical to our survival. When a new situation makes us fearful, the brain records the details in our neurons to help us avoid similar situations in the future or use appropriate caution.
What’s still a mystery is why these memories, recorded by the brain’s hippocampus, become so strong.
To find out, Hen and Jessica Jimenez, an MD/PhD student at Columbia, placed mice into new, frightening environments and recorded the activity of hippocampal neurons that reach out to the brain’s fear center (the amygdala). The neurons’ activity was also recorded a day later when the mice tried to retrieve memories of the experience.
Unsurprisingly, neurons that respond to the frightening environment send that information to the brain’s fear center.
“What was surprising was that these neurons were synchronized when the mouse later recalled the memory,” Hen says.
“We saw that it’s the synchrony that is critical to establish the fear memory, and the greater the synchrony, the stronger the memory,” Jimenez adds. “These are the types of mechanisms that explain why you remember salient events.”
How and when synchronization occurs is still unknown, but the answer could reveal the inner workings of the brain that create lifelong memories and lead to new treatments for posttraumatic stress disorder.
“In people with PTSD, many similar events remind them of the original frightening situation,” Hen says, “and it’s possible that synchronization of their neurons has become too strong. We’re really trying to dig into the mechanisms of how emotional memories form to find better treatments for people with PTSD and memory disorders in general.”
@toxicalert
Últimamente yo
“Millones de personas han decidido no ser sensibles. Han desarrollado pieles gruesas a su alrededor para evitar que alguien los hiera. Pero a un gran precio. Nadie los puede herir, pero nadie los puede hacer felices tampoco.”
— Osho
“Stress is caused by being here but wanting to be there.”
— Eckhart Tolle
“Un día te enteras que todo ese tiempo que estuviste con alguien fue una profunda lección para lo que vendría después. Y ahora, todo eso te sirve, lo usas, lo pones en práctica. Y ríes un poco. Porque ya no vas a equivocarte tanto.”
— @poetaprohibido (via poetaprohibido)
al menos
Never fear the shadows. are only the hint that somewhere nearby there is a shining light. R u t h R e n k e l . . . #portrait #dark #pic https://www.instagram.com/p/Bv7udXWFm_u/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=i3qrdfg765eb
I guess everyone have some kind of mental disorder
Esta es mi carta de despedida. Será la última vez que te escriba pero no la última que te piense, solo quiero agradecer los 789 días que estuviste conmigo. Quiero disculparme por los momentos en los que trate ayudarte pero no lo logre, yo solo quise hacerte feliz, pero fui mucho más insuficiente de lo crei. Intenté ser mejor, solo por ti, quería que cuando alguien te preguntara sobre mi tú respondieras "es lo mejor que puede haber en mi vida" pero por el contrario parecía que entre más intentaba ser mejor más dañaba esta relación, me pregunto ¿fue amor lo que tú sentiste? porque no sé cómo funciona el amor pero ¿cómo hiciste para dejarlo de sentir después de tantos días? porque yo no he podido, desearía que me enseñaras, porque se nota que estás feliz ahora mismo, que no hago falta, que siempre estorbe. Pero aún así te agradezco, por esa felicidad que me diste, ahora le veo sentido a muchas frases de amor, ahora entiendo canciones tristes y ahora te extraño más que nunca. Pero si no te dejo ir ahora tu recuerdo me va a matar, que seas feliz.
-El “amor de tu vida”
...
-¿Porqué siempre regresas?
- Han pasado años desde lo que tuvimos, no podemos seguir hiriendo a personas sólo porque no podemos olvidarnos.
- Pensé que está vez sería diferente, pero volví a ti...
- Siempre vuelves, y lo peor de todo es que yo espero que lo hagas.