In a world saturated with stories, narratives knit together emotion, memory, and meaning.
A new study in the Journal of Neuroscience suggests that how a story is told changes the way it’s encoded in the brain and remembered.
Stories don’t just entertain; they sculpt memory pathways, engaging different neural networks depending on whether we focus on what we saw or what we felt.
Stories provide the common narrative for civilization’s cultures, sharing in our evolution as much as genetics and niche.
A new study in the Journal of Neuroscience investigates just how a story’s content shifts how it is remembered.
Author's summary: Stories shape brain memory pathways.