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This article contains some claims that remain unverified. While much of the content may be accurate, exercise care when relying on this information.
This article contains some claims that remain unverified. While much of the content may be accurate, exercise care when relying on this information.
Status
Last Updated
2025-05-21 10:56:41 UTC
Verified By
Rollup News
A study reveals that our ability to remember object details, like a banana's yellow color, relies on strong connections between the brain's visual and language regions. Disrupted connections between these areas, as seen in stroke patients, impair both brain activity and performance on object-color tasks, highlighting the role of language in organizing and storing sensory knowledge.
Visual and language systems must communicate to store object knowledge.
Disrupted connections led to poor color-memory performance despite intact vision.
Language systems help shape and structure how visual information is stored in memory.
Disrupted connections between the brain's visual and language regions impair object-color memory.