The cerebellum is a motor region of the brain, dealing with the subconscious movements of the muscles. This butterfly-shaped section is the second largest area of the brain. The cerebellum deals with coordination, posture, and balance.
Memory
One of the major human mental activities
Cortex is capable of storing and retrieving both short-and long-term memory
Temporal, parietal, and occipital lobes are among the areas responsible for short- and long-term memory
Engrams---structural traces in the cerebral cortex that comprise long-term memories
Cerebrum's limbic system plays a key role in memory
The cerebellum primarily regulates posture, muscle tone, and muscular coordination. It also stores memories related to skills and habits.
In the cerebellum!
Memory is stored in the brain. Some things like an odd answer to a question in maths are stored in short term memory and others like your birthday are stored in long term memory.
Well basically what we remember are memories so let us start by getting to know about memory.There are 3 different type of memory : sensory memory, short term memory and long term memory. By using the word remember usually something to do with long term memory because we usually recall things from this memory. Every type of information that we receive or touch our senses are encoding into sensory memory and this memory will transfer into short term memory (short term memory will decay rapidly) and by rehearsal short term memory are stored in many different part of our brain as long term memory(this memory will be stored in our brain for a long time more then short term memory). So by remember something it mean we recall those memory that were stored in our brain.
Memory is stored in the hippocampus region of the brain. We generally have two kinds of memory, short term and long term.
The Atkinson-Shiffrin model of memory is a cognitive theory that uses terms like short-term and long-term memory. This model proposes that information is first stored in the short-term memory and can be transferred to long-term memory for more permanent storage through rehearsal and encoding processes.
hippocampus and cerebellum
The conversion of short term memory to long term memory is called memory consolidation.
Short term memory is responsible for hanging on to information until it can be stored in long term memory. Short term memory is similar to your ROM, and is "erased" after a little while unless you transfer it over to the "hard drive." Part of the trouble in learnning new facts is trying to move them from the short term memory over to the long term. It often takes 20 repetitions before you remember something.
Memory is stored throughout the brain. However, the part of the brain responsible for actually coordinating the long-term storage of memory is the hippocampus (in the limbic system).
Pseudo-forgetting is when there is a block between your short term memory and your long term memory. Something we know something (such as a telephone number), but when we attempt to recall it and we fail, we conclude we have forgotten it. The fact is we may never have stored the material or it may have been incorrectly stored. So it is not forgetting in the original sense, because the information never made it to the long term memory.
Short term memory is where you store stuff that you won't need for a very long time. Long term is the opposite.
The three main levels of memory are sensory memory, short-term memory, and long-term memory. Sensory memory holds sensory information for a very brief period, short-term memory stores information for a short time without rehearsal, and long-term memory has a more permanent storage capacity for information.