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Brain Stores Recovery and Relapse Memories in Parallel, Alcohol Study Suggests
New research published in Neuron suggests the brain preserves competing alcohol-related memories in different groups of the same cell type within one region, helping explain why relapse remains so persis
Key Takeaways
- A Neuron study suggests relapse and recovery memories are stored in different groups of the same cell type within one brain region.
- The findings imply extinction training may create a competing memory rather than erase the original alcohol memory.
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DT Editorial AI··via medicalxpress.com