Memory
in sentence
1963 examples of Memory in a sentence
Without
memory
we would be amnesiacs.
So again,
memory
is the city,
memory
is the world.
Without the
memory
there would be no story to tell.
And it's not only our memory, but those who remember us, which means that architecture is not mute.
And the third is to augment
memory
by creating a visual persistence.
The first was erected by King Gorm the Old in
memory
of his Queen Thyrvi, and the second by their son, Harald Bluetooth, after Gorm’s death.
The inscription on the Danish Glavendrup stone has fearsomely declared for a thousand years: “A warlock be he who damages this stone or drags it in
memory
of another!” Hi everybody.
He can then find the highest right-most stacks by doing the same going right-to-left: 1, 3, 4, 4, 4. In the end he’ll have a table like this in his
memory.
So she created three artifacts with the ability to restore people’s power, creativity, and memory, and smuggled them to three communities.
Beginning in the late 19th century, researchers hypothesized that cognitive abilities like verbal reasoning, working memory, and visual-spatial skills reflected an underlying general intelligence, or g factor.
That means your memory, your judgment, your impulse control deteriorate, and the brain areas for anger and anxiety are activated.
Memory
is such an everyday thing that we almost take it for granted.
It's only when
memory
starts to fail that we appreciate just how amazing it is and how much we allow our past experiences to define us.
But
memory
is not always a good thing.
As the American poet and clergyman John Lancaster Spalding once said, "As
memory
may be a paradise from which we cannot be driven, it may also be a hell from which we cannot escape."
In this way, we can think of PTSD as being a disorder of maladaptive
memory.
Now, I should stop myself here, because I'm talking about
memory
as if it's a single thing.
There are many different types of memory, and these depend upon different circuits and regions within the brain.
As you can see, there are two major distinctions in our types of
memory.
The other type of
memory
is non-declarative.
The classic example of a non-declarative
memory
is the motor skill for riding a bike.
Getting back to PTSD, another type of non-declarative
memory
is emotional
memory.
Emotional
memory
is supported by a small almond-shaped structure called the amygdala and its connections.
Declarative memory, especially the what, where and when of event memory, is supported by a seahorse-shaped region of the brain called the hippocampus.
As you can see, as you increase a person's level of stress from not stressful to slightly stressful, the hippocampus, acting to support the event memory, increases in its activity and works better to support the storage of that declarative
memory.
Now, while stress is doing that to the hippocampus, look at what it does to the amygdala, that structure important for the emotional, non-declarative
memory.
This approach has only been considered a possibility because of the profound changes in our understanding of
memory
in recent years.
Traditionally, it was thought that making a
memory
was like writing in a notebook in pen: once the ink had dried, you couldn't change the information.
It was thought that all those structural changes that happen in the brain to support the storage of
memory
were finished within about six hours, and after that, they were permanent.
However, more recent research suggests that making a
memory
is actually more like writing in a word processor.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
There
Their
About
Other
Movie
Would
Could
Brain
Years
People
First
After
Still
Recent
Remember
Being
Never
Things
Where