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2007-12-13 02:52:30 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous in Social Science Psychology

3 answers

What the other person said is true. Some people think we may store memories in a quantum computer fashion. Nothing is really clear yet though. It is also probable that we store different memories (those that are visually based, verbally based, feelings, etc.) in different areas of the brain. Teasing apart one memory from one area of the brain from another may prove impossible when one memory becomes linked to another or to a deep feeling lodged in our limbic brain.

Since cognitive psychology is the science of how we learn and make internal models in order to understand and make sense of our world and our experiences it is going to be at the cutting edge of neuroscience now for many years. Freud? Well that's probably just a bunch of guesswork compared to cognitive psychology.

2007-12-13 03:12:08 · answer #1 · answered by Zelda Hunter 7 · 1 0

Since our brains govern just about everything we experience, almost everything is related to neuroscience.

We can't yet identify the physiology of cognitions, but it's clear that our brain fires in certain ways, with certain chemicals acting as neurotransmitters, when we actually think and reason. It's a pretty young science.

2007-12-13 02:57:12 · answer #2 · answered by Buying is Voting 7 · 1 0

nerve endings

2007-12-13 03:09:06 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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