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  1. Feb 26, 2022 · The researchers recorded 900 seconds of brain activity before and around the patient's death – the first-ever recording of a dying human's brain, said Dr. Ajmal Zemmar, who treated the patient ...

  2. Dec 9, 2020 · These findings, therefore, indicate that while the adaptive, memory-enhancing effects of survival processing and motivation for reward may rely on overlapping neural mechanisms, the survival processing effect is unlikely to be due to motivation. Data Availability Statement. The data are available at https://osf.io/tdyrb/. Ethics Statement

  3. Sep 12, 2023 · With respect to ruminative memory use, the relationship with valence seems relatively straightforward (Harris et al., 2014). Ruminative memory use often entails negative memories and can be considered maladaptive (Cappeliez & O'Rourke, 2006), on the other hand, negative memories can also serve adaptive functions (Burnell et al., 2020). This is ...

  4. Functional role of neuronal oscillations and temporal dynamics in the dying brain. Memory recall is a hallmark of NDEs. Recurrent descriptions of near-death survivors include the experience of autobiographical memories; NDEs themselves are also remembered well and subsequently described in much detail (Martial et al., 2020).

  5. Feb 22, 2022 · Summary: A new study reveals brain oscillations associated with memory retrieval alter in the moments before death, suggesting the brain may replay significant life events just before we die. Source: Frontiers. Imagine reliving your entire life in the space of seconds.

  6. The adaptive memory framework posits that biological memory systems, including those of humans, are the product of millions of years of natural selection; thus, evidence of these selective pressures should be observable in mnemonic performance under conditions relevant to evolutionary fitness.

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  8. The ecological demands of an herbivore, an insectivore, or a carnivore are quite different. An ungulate that eats grass does not need to engage memory processes for feeding. It simply puts its mouth down and chews—the stomach does the rest. One might suspect that this foraging ecology puts low demands on memory systems.

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