Although memory has been the predominant focus of cognitive neuroscience for the past fifty years, many authors throughout history have been interested in forgetting and have discussed the adaptive and beneficial nature of this process. With this presentation, we review evidence suggesting that forgetting is useful when previously stored information from the past interfere with the storage and recall of newer information. Adaptive forgetting is the process by which such information is erased or set aside in order not to interfere with this recall. Such phenomenon allows a more optimal processing of information in short-term forms of memory (working memory) as well as in long-term semantic memory, when forgetting of episodic contextual elements of discrete memories is required to extract a common rule from many different experiences. Our results suggest that long-term synaptic depression, in particular in the hippocampus, could underlie this type of adaptive forgetting.
Comprendre le fonctionnement des organismes vivants, telle est l’ambition du Centre de biologie intégrative (CBI), à Toulouse. Pour atteindre cet objectif, le CBI développe des approches multidisciplinaires, multi-échelles des molécules isolées aux organismes entiers et aux sociétés animales, et utilise de nombreux organismes modèles, des bactéries à l'homme.
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