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The brain has a ‘tell’ for when it’s recalling a false memory, study suggests


A specific pattern of electrical activity can be detected in neurons in the hippocampus of the brain before a false memory is recalled. (Image credit: koto_feja via Getty Images)

Your brain activity changes depending on whether you’re recalling a true or a false memory, new research suggests. A “false” memory refers to when you remember something that didn’t happen or that actually occured at a different time or place. 

Remembering past events, experiences or information tied to a specific context, such as a birthday party, first date or recent trip to the grocery store, is known as episodic memory; that’s opposed to semantic memory, which is related to general knowledge and facts untethered to a time or place and not related to one’s own past. Episodic memories are largely controlled by a brain region called the hippocampus, but what happens in the brain structure when people misremember events has been a mystery — until now. 

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