The Happy Sad Spot
Imagine your brain is like a big house, and inside this house there’s a room called the amygdala. This room is super good at telling you if something is happy, scary, or exciting, kind of like a detective who knows what feelings are coming. When you see your favorite ice cream, the amygdala sends a message saying, “This is good!”
The Remembering Room
Right next door to the amygdala lives another room called the hippocampus. This room helps you remember things, like how to ride a bike or what your best friend’s name is. When something exciting happens, like getting a gold star at school, the hippocampus takes a picture of that moment and stores it away so you can remember it later.
Together, these two rooms work like a team: one tells you how you feel, and the other helps you remember what happened, just like when you play with your toys and then remember how much fun you had.
Examples
- A child remembers their first day at school because the hippocampus stores that memory.
- The brain uses neurotransmitters like serotonin to help you feel happy.
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See also
- How Does Your Brain Deletes Your Childhood Memories Work?
- How Your Brain Chooses What to Remember?
- What is cognition?
- Why Do Songs Get Stuck In Our Head? | COLOSSAL QUESTIONS?
- What is Your brain uses memories from before?