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Memory-guided behavior: an overview

This short course provides a broad introduction to how memory supports and shapes behavior. Aimed at undergraduate, master’s, and postdoctoral students.

Course details
Non-credit or Credit course
Non-credit course
Teacher
Dr. Encarni Marcos
Category
Basic Neuroscience
Dimension
Empirical neuroscience & Clinical neuroscience
Level
Intermediate
Includes
  • Lecture
  • VIdeos

This short course provides a broad introduction to how memory supports and shapes behavior. Aimed at undergraduate, master’s, and postdoctoral students, it highlights key experimental approaches that have advanced our understanding of memory processes. Participants will gain a basic understanding of memory formation, consolidation, and retrieval, and how these processes guide decision making and adaptive actions. Moreover, the course also explores how disruptions in specific brain areas or their connectivity can alter memory and, consequently, behavior. Overall, it offers an introduction to the biological basis of memory and its modulation under healthy and pathological conditions.

Upon completion of the course, the undergraduate/master/doctoral student should be able to:
•    Recognize the main brain systems involved in memory-guided behavior
•    Describe how experimental approaches have contributed to the study of memory
•    Identify how disruptions in specific brain areas or their connectivity can alter memory and behavior

If you have any comments or questions please contact Dr. Encarni Marcos at emarcos@umh.es

Course Features
Foundations of memory: encoding, consolidation, and retrieval
How memory shapes perception, decision making, and behavior

Lessons

Number of lessons: 1
  •  
    Dr. Encarni Marcos

    This lesson offers an overview of how memory is formed, stored, and used to guide actions. Designed for students at all levels, it covers fundamental processes such as encoding, consolidation, and retrieval, along with key experimental methods…