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Tomás Ryan

In a Nutshell

Tomás studies the neuroarchitecture of memory, making the groundbreaking discovery that memories thought to be lost to amnesia due to brain damage or disease might still exist and can potentially be retrieved, offering hope for new memory loss treatments.

About TomÁs

Dr. Tomás Ryan is a leading neuroscientist who studies how the brain forms and stores memories. After completing his education in Dublin and Cambridge, he did research at the Picower Institute for Learning and Memory at MIT. This work focused on the “neuroarchitecture of memory,” which is a fancy way of saying he studies the physical and biological structures that hold our memories. Tomás and his team made a groundbreaking discovery by experimenting with mice that had amnesia. They found that memories thought to be lost due to brain damage or disease might not be gone forever. Instead, they discovered that these memories could still exist in the brain and could potentially be brought back. This exciting discovery challenged the traditional belief that amnesia meant a memory was completely erased. Today, Tomás is an Assistant Professor at Trinity College Dublin in Ireland. He leads a research group that continues to explore the basic biology of memory. His work is very important because it offers hope for developing new treatments for people with memory loss. His research could one day lead to ways to help patients with amnesia caused by trauma, stress, or conditions like dementia and Alzheimer’s disease to remember things they thought were forgotten.

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