“How alcohol, time and trying to forget trauma can change what we remember” September 27, 2018 By Brooke Mansfield “The part of the brain that is doing most of the heavy lifting to encode new memory is called the hippocampus,” said Scott Swartzwelder, a professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Duke University. “It’s a structure that happens to be very, very sensitive to alcohol.” Filed Under: Categories: News More from NADIA Consortium Pandey, Riley recognized by Research Society on Alcohol Preventing risky drinking in college students: NIAAA updates fact sheets in English and Spanish for parents on the risks of college drinking NADIA and NCANDA collaborate on “Alcohol and the Teenage Brain” webinar for Society for Neuroscience