• Bates College
  • Neuroscience Program
  • IRB
  • Internal

Memory Dynamics Lab

Justin C. Hulbert, Principal Investigator

  • People
    • Principal investigator
    • Lab management
    • Research assistants
    • Alumni/Alumnae
    • Thesis students
  • Research
    • Overview
    • Publications
  • Courses
    • Introduction to Neuroscience (NRSC 160/PSYC 160)
    • Medical Psychology (PSYC 215)
    • Neurofeedback: Tapping the brain’s potential (NRSC 329)
    • The Sleeping Brain (NRSC S32)
  • Get Involved!
    • Get in touch
    • Research experience
    • Participate

February 4, 2021

Annual Review of Psychology on Active Forgetting

The past decade has witnessed a great expansion in knowledge about the brain mechanisms underlying active forgetting in its varying forms. A core discovery concerns the role of the prefrontal cortex in exerting top-down control over mnemonic activity in the hippocampus and other brain structures, often via inhibitory control. New findings reveal that such processes not only induce forgetting of specific memories but also can suppress the operation of mnemonic processes more broadly, triggering windows of anterograde and retrograde amnesia in healthy people. Recent work extends active forgetting to nonhuman animals, presaging the development of a multilevel mechanistic account that spans the cognitive, systems, network, and even cellular levels. This work reveals how organisms adapt their memories to their cognitive and emotional goals and has implications for understanding vulnerability to psychiatric disorders.

Read all about it in our recent article published in the Annual Review of Psychology (open access).

Article by admin / Featured

Lab Mission

The Memory Dynamics Lab, part of the Neuroscience Program at Bates College, works to harness the mechanisms responsible for adaptively acquiring, retrieving, consolidating, and forgetting memories through cognitive neuroscience (including the study of human brainwaves and behavior while awake and asleep). In doing so, we aim to distill and disseminate strategies designed to help learners capitalize on these mental operations, allowing them to better remember when/what they want to remember and forget when/what they want to forget.

Mailing Address

Justin C. Hulbert, Ph.D.
Bates College
44 Campus Ave.
Lewiston, ME 04240

Contact Us

(e): jhulbert@bates.edu

Related Links

»CompMem Lab
»Memory Control Lab
»Context Lab
»BAP Lab

  • People
  • Research
  • Courses
  • Get Involved!

Copyright © 2026 · Education Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in