U of L neuroscientists get nearly $1-million to test idea in memory formation
LETHBRIDGE, AB – A pair of researchers at the University of Lethbridge hope to unlock answers about how long-term memories are formed and to open up new avenues for therapeutic treatments.
Drs. Bruce McNaughton and Robert Sutherland received a grant of $918,000 over five years from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research in hopes of helping people with Alzheimer’s or who have other memory-related conditions.
“The main point of the project grant is to test an idea about the organization of long-term memory that’s never been directly tested before,” says Sutherland. “We have had a long, long interest in trying to understand this particular process. It’s relevant to aging, dementia, and almost any kind of failure of long-term memory.”
He explains that there are two systems involved in the memory formation process, the hippocampus (short-term memory) and the neocortex (long-term memory).