Memory
in sentence
1963 examples of Memory in a sentence
First of all, it's going to be about
memory.
It's a
memory
of very high-dimensional patterns, like the things that come from your eyes.
It's also
memory
of sequences: you cannot learn or recall anything outside of a sequence.
You might know that fat has
memory.
Radical neighborliness is just another word for true community, the kind bound by
memory
and history, mutual trust and familiarity built over years and irreplaceable.
So it's really important to remember that sensory,
memory
and cognitive processes are all important, but they're only important to either drive or suppress future movements.
So I think people who study sensation or
memory
without realizing why you're laying down memories of childhood.
It's involved in learning and
memory.
And of course, a by-product of all of that is immensely rich virtual models of every interesting part of the Earth, collected not just from overhead flights and from satellite images and so on, but from the collective
memory.
And as a blind person, your visual
memory
fades, and is replaced with how you feel about things and how things sound and how things smell.
But when you're blind, you have the tactile
memory
for things.
And the great beauty is that you can then go from memory, out of those association cortices, and produce back images in the very same regions that have perception.
And the autobiographical self has prompted extended memory, reasoning, imagination, creativity and language.
Chemo brain presents itself through
memory
loss, an inability to concentrate and an inability to solve problems.
If you have a
memory
transplant, are you the same person?
So we'll start with the hippocampus, shown in yellow, which is the organ of
memory.
And scientists have begun to understand how spatial
memory
works by recording from individual neurons in rats or mice while they forage or explore an environment looking for food.
So beyond spatial memory, if we look for this grid-like firing pattern throughout the whole brain, we see it in a whole series of locations which are always active when we do all kinds of autobiographical
memory
tasks, like remembering the last time you went to a wedding, for example.
The people who design the
memory
systems of computers.
Most computers have two kinds of
memory
systems: a fast
memory
system, like a set of
memory
chips that has limited capacity, because those chips are expensive, and a slow
memory
system, which is much larger.
In order for the computer to operate as efficiently as possible, you want to make sure that the pieces of information you want to access are in the fast
memory
system, so that you can get to them quickly.
Each time you access a piece of information, it's loaded into the fast
memory
and the computer has to decide which item it has to remove from that memory, because it has limited capacity.
Over the years, computer scientists have tried a few different strategies for deciding what to remove from the fast
memory.
They've tried things like choosing something at random or applying what's called the "first-in, first-out principle," which means removing the item which has been in the
memory
for the longest.
This says if you're going to decide to remove something from memory, you should take out the thing which was last accessed the furthest in the past.
Your wardrobe is just like the computer's
memory.
I've searched my
memory
banks, because that is funny and I should remember doing it and I don't.
I worked this week in a school where I was coaching them on using pictures for
memory.
So that, if that was just drawn in the presentation, would really stay in the memory, wouldn't it?
An example would be in "Finding Nemo," in the short tension, you were always worried, would Dory's short-term
memory
make her forget whatever she was being told by Marlin.
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