The second reason to assume that consolidation is not instantaneous comes from patients who have sustained brain injury which causes retrograde amnesia, a loss of memory for events occurring before the injury. Typically, retrograde amnesia is time-graded, meaning that there may be near total loss of memory for the events immediately before the injury, partial loss of events occurring somewhat before the injury, and little or no loss of memory for events from the distant past. For example, someone who sustains a blow to the head in the course of a car accident may have no memory of the accident itself, sketchy memory of the drive which led to the crash, and normal memory for events before the day of the crash. In other cases, memory disruptions may occur which stretch as far back as several years before the injury.
These findings suggest that new memories are vulnerable, and that brain damage can disrupt them before they are fully stabilized in memory; older memories become progressively more stable and are more likely to survive.
The biological mechanisms of consolidation are poorly understood, although long-term potentiation has been implicated in causing anatomical changes in the brain which may underlie long-term memory formation.
Further Reading:
Article : "MEMORY TIP #1"
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