Memory
in sentence
1963 examples of Memory in a sentence
I mean, like, where did the '60s go, and can I go there, too? (Laughter) But what if you could have a
memory
that was as good as computer memory, and was about your life?
If you had this
memory
all your life, you could have the AI look at all the interactions you had with people over time and help you reflect on the long arc of your relationships.
I believe that AI will make personal
memory
enhancement a reality.
In my view, a personal
memory
is a private
memory.
Now for most of us, the impact of augmented personal
memory
will be a more improved mental gain, maybe, hopefully, a bit more social grace.
But for the millions who suffer from Alzheimer's and dementia, the difference that augmented
memory
could make is a difference between a life of isolation and a life of dignity and connection.
The real epidemic is anxiety over
memory
loss.
People with more positive feelings towards aging walk faster, they do better on
memory
tests, they heal quicker, and they live longer.
Our cultural
memory?
Of course, the loss of human life is the most heartbreaking loss ... but cultural heritage offers us a way to preserve the
memory
of the people for future generations.
Since I was a kid, I've had a terrible rote
memory.
So every time a cell divides, all of its DNA has to be copied, all of the coding DNA inside of those chromosomes, because that carries the vital operating instructions that keep our cells in good working order, so my heart cells can keep a steady beat, which I assure you they're not doing right now, and my immune cells can fight off bacteria and viruses, and our brain cells can save the
memory
of our first kiss and keep on learning throughout life.
What happens is, they burn into flash
memory
the software, and then test them for a few hours.
They're more likely to be overweight, to have high blood pressure, and then decades down the line, more likely to have a failing memory, poor health and even to die earlier.
The
memory
of these people has blurred as time has passed.
We'd talk about our kids growing up and the slowing pace of our parents, and our dad who's suffering from leukemia,
memory
loss and infection.
The only clear
memory
I have of that day was a man standing in front of the most powerful place in Georgia, looking at me and telling me I don't belong.
You can think of them like DNA
memory.
If you try to memorize a list of words for a test tomorrow, the words will be stored in your short-term
memory
and you'll forget them after a few days.
For most patients, this
memory
loss does improve over time.
[Sound is memory.]
It's the
memory
of my father coming back home.
You see, Mom was having issues with
memory
loss and accepting her age.
Mom was losing her short-term memory, but was better recalling her younger years.
That's a lot of storage,
memory.
Of course, the
memory
is really huge.
I read about how the CPU is constantly shuffling data back and forth between the memory, the RAM and the ALU, the arithmetic and logic unit.
OK, so a computer picks a specific item of data from memory, it sends it into the processor or the ALU, and then it puts the result back into
memory.
But this flashbulb memory, as it's called, is when all the elements came together to define not just the event, but my emotional connection to it.
If you look at the square that you build with the origami and some counters growing off it, the pattern that it has is exactly the pattern that you need to make a
memory.
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