Where is Memory Information Stored in the Brain?
James Tee, Desmond P. Taylor

TL;DR
This paper reviews experimental evidence supporting two main hypotheses about where memory is stored in the brain: in synapses or within neurons at the molecular level, discussing implications for psychology.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of key experiments supporting both the synaptic and cell-intrinsic hypotheses of memory storage, highlighting ongoing debates.
Findings
Evidence from sea slugs supports synaptic hypothesis.
Experiments in mice suggest molecular memory transfer.
Studies in single-celled organisms challenge synaptic-only models.
Abstract
Within the scientific research community, memory information in the brain is commonly believed to be stored in the synapse - a hypothesis famously attributed to psychologist Donald Hebb. However, there is a growing minority who postulate that memory is stored inside the neuron at the molecular (RNA or DNA) level - an alternative postulation known as the cell-intrinsic hypothesis, coined by psychologist Randy Gallistel. In this paper, we review a selection of key experimental evidence from both sides of the argument. We begin with Eric Kandel's studies on sea slugs, which provided the first evidence in support of the synaptic hypothesis. Next, we touch on experiments in mice by John O'Keefe (declarative memory and the hippocampus) and Joseph LeDoux (procedural fear memory and the amygdala). Then, we introduce the synapse as the basic building block of today's artificial intelligence…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMemory and Neural Mechanisms · Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptors Study · Photoreceptor and optogenetics research
