Literary Rides
How does the human brain continuously learn new words, experiences, and ideas without destroying older memories? Why can language remain stable even while vocabulary and knowledge constantly expand? This episode of Literary Rides explores one of the most fascinating discoveries in cognitive science and psycholinguistics: the brain’s use of two complementary learning systems — the hippocampus and the neocortex. Drawing from neuroscience, connectionist theory, and language research, the discussion examines how rapid memory formation and slow conceptual integration work together to create stable human cognition. The episode explains memory consolidation, semantic networks, catastrophic interference, and the gradual formation of linguistic knowledge. It also investigates how these ideas reshape our understanding of learning, revision, language acquisition, and even literary interpretation. Moving between neuroscience, linguistics, artificial intelligence, and education, this conversation reveals that memory is not simply storage — it is the dynamic architecture through which humans construct meaning, identity, and intellectual continuity. Ideal for: UGC NET English studentsLinguistics and psycholinguistics learnersCognitive science enthusiastsResearchers of language and memoryTeachers and lifelong learners
99 episodios
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