A team of researchers from the University of Queensland (UQ) have identified exactly when new neurons become important for learning.

The report’s lead researcher, Dr Jana Vukovic, said that the study highlighted the importance of new neuron development.

“New neurons are continually produced in the brain, passing through a number of developmental stages before becoming fully mature,” Dr Vukovic said. 
“Using a genetic technique to delete immature neurons in animal models, we found they had great difficulty learning a new spatial task. 

“There are ways to encourage the production of new neurons – including physical exercise – to improve learning. 

“The new neurons appear particularly important for the brain to detect subtle but critical differences in the environment that can impact on the individual.” 

The report also found that immature neurons, born in the hippocampus region of the brain, are required for learning but not for the retrieval of past memories.

“On the other hand, if the animals needed to remember a task they had already mastered in the past, before these immature neurons were deleted, their ability to perform the task was the same – so, they've remembered the task they learned earlier,” Dr Vukovic said.