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The AI Hippocampus: How Far are We From Human Memory?

14 January 2026
Zixia Jia
Jiaqi Li
Yipeng Kang
Yuxuan Wang
Tong Wu
Quansen Wang
Xiaobo Wang
Shuyi Zhang
Junzhe Shen
Qing Li
Siyuan Qi
Yitao Liang
Di He
Zilong Zheng
Song-Chun Zhu
    LLMAGRALMKELM
ArXiv (abs)PDFHTMLHuggingFace (4 upvotes)Github
Main:53 Pages
17 Figures
Bibliography:10 Pages
8 Tables
Appendix:1 Pages
Abstract

Memory plays a foundational role in augmenting the reasoning, adaptability, and contextual fidelity of modern Large Language Models and Multi-Modal LLMs. As these models transition from static predictors to interactive systems capable of continual learning and personalized inference, the incorporation of memory mechanisms has emerged as a central theme in their architectural and functional evolution. This survey presents a comprehensive and structured synthesis of memory in LLMs and MLLMs, organizing the literature into a cohesive taxonomy comprising implicit, explicit, and agentic memory paradigms. Specifically, the survey delineates three primary memory frameworks. Implicit memory refers to the knowledge embedded within the internal parameters of pre-trained transformers, encompassing their capacity for memorization, associative retrieval, and contextual reasoning. Recent work has explored methods to interpret, manipulate, and reconfigure this latent memory. Explicit memory involves external storage and retrieval components designed to augment model outputs with dynamic, queryable knowledge representations, such as textual corpora, dense vectors, and graph-based structures, thereby enabling scalable and updatable interaction with information sources. Agentic memory introduces persistent, temporally extended memory structures within autonomous agents, facilitating long-term planning, self-consistency, and collaborative behavior in multi-agent systems, with relevance to embodied and interactive AI. Extending beyond text, the survey examines the integration of memory within multi-modal settings, where coherence across vision, language, audio, and action modalities is essential. Key architectural advances, benchmark tasks, and open challenges are discussed, including issues related to memory capacity, alignment, factual consistency, and cross-system interoperability.

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