ChatterBank1 min ago
memory formation
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A bit of a change of subject but one small aspect of an answer here is that well rehearsed/automated memories (I think, specifically of movement, like how to ride a bike) are stored in the cerebellum rather than the cortex.
Also, I agree with bernardo's practice/exercise comments.
Except.. they aren't 'nerves' they're synapses. And the rehearsal thing is a (proposed) way of explaining how things are remembered, not how they are stored.
I don't think anyone really knows the answer to your question, but (from what i remember) Stevie above is right about the episodic (memories of things that have happened to you), semantic (memories of facts eg knowing the alphabet) and procedural (remembering how to ride a bike/ play the piano etc) memory are definitely stored separately. Well, procedural memory is separate, anyway.
Oh God if you find out you get a Nobel prize.
JZ Young wrote a lot about this in the fifties.
Other experiments are: if you teach a rat a learned thing, and then take away bits of its brain, you cant cut out the memory unless - you virtually take out the whole brain.
Clin Blakemore Prof phys Ox, did a series on this a few years ago. Even with wonky glasses a good games player can relearn hand to eye coo-rodination within a minute or so.
In short they still, after a hundred or so years have very little idea.....