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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Out of Date,
By Jiang Xueqin (Toronto, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Making of Memory (Paperback)
This book was an award winner when it was first published in 1992 but since then neuroscience and psychology have advanced so far that this book is antiquated and irrelevant. It's annoying how the author keeps on talking about the biochemistry profession, and asks interesting questions but doesn't really answer them. For anyone interested in neuroscience check out "The Accidental Mind" or "The Female Brain" or "The Brain that Changes Itself".
15 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Are human memories stored in nucleic acids?,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Making of Memory: From Molecules to Mind (Paperback)
We were taught in basic biochemistry that this question was answered in 1965 with a resounding, table pounding "No." Case closed. But on reflection, and at this remove in time, it is clear that the (rather appealing, really) possibility that nucleic acids constitute a long term memory storage medium was neither tested nor refuted 35 years ago. No one knew how. No one would know how today. The author, who became deeply skeptical of the original 1960s research that launched the idea of nucleic acid memory -- tells the story of this forgotten controversy from a personal point of view, and this is the most interesting part of the book. The fact is, biological information is very typically stored as sequences and shapes, and there is no reason to imagine the human memory is stored in some entirely different way. Probably the notion of nucleic acid memory will get a second hearing someday when we have the technology to actually test it, and some sort of a hunch or clue about how such a thing might work in the brain. A fun book on the subject is the science fiction classic, "Hauser's Memory," and it is probably the only other book on nucleic acid memory that is still available. For a quick, seamless review of the currently accepted view of human memory, which is grounded on the assumption that memory is stored as synaptic changes, see Kandel & Squire's book, "Memory. From Mind to Molecules." For a sense of why the cherished assumption of synaptic memory will probably fail, and pretty soon, see the recent, mildly written but revolutionary book: "Spikes," by Rieke et al.
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