Memory
in sentence
1963 examples of Memory in a sentence
The problems, actually, for this kind of case come manyfold from decades of scientific research involving human
memory.
The other comes from an interesting aspect of human
memory
that's related to various brain functions but I can sum up for the sake of brevity here in a simple line: The brain abhors a vacuum.
They retained me, as a forensic neurophysiologist, because I had expertise in eyewitness
memory
identification, which obviously makes sense for this case, right?
And I said, "Is there anything I can do to help?" and — (Laughter) — the nurse kind of had a hysterical laugh, and I'm turning my head trying to see everybody, and I had this weird
memory
of being in college and raising, raising money for the flood victims of Bangladesh, and then I look over and my anesthesiologist is clamping the mask on me, and I think, "He looks Bangladeshi," — (Laughter) — and I just have those two facts, and I just think, "This could work somehow."
I have a power manager, mouse driver, memory, etc., and I built this in Kyoto, the old capital of Japan.
So the bus diligently carries the data into the computer to the memory, to the CPU, the VRAM, etc., and it's an actual working computer.
Take any cognitive domain you want, memory, motor planning, thinking about your mother-in-law, getting angry at people, emotional response, it goes on and on, put people into functional MRI devices, and image how these kinds of variables map onto brain activity.
One of the most impressive knowledge workers in recent
memory
is a guy named Ken Jennings.
You can't see the future, obviously, and you can't see the past, except in your
memory.
Here we've got a little bit of long-term memory, so, you know that night you want to forget, when you got really drunk?
Children in care, who've had a life in care, deserve the right to own and live the
memory
of their own childhood.
He has the most impeccable
memory.
Things that we read about in the paper with gory footage burn into
memory
more than reports of a lot more people dying in their beds of old age.
Sure, it is involved in positive emotions like love and compassion, but it's also involved in tons of other processes, like memory, language, attention, even anger, disgust and pain.
I wanted to see if my
memory
was correct, and, my God, it was.
Now, one of the things that I have issues with is that, as the days and weeks and months go by, time just seems to start blurring and blending into each other and, you know, I hated that, and visualization is the way to trigger
memory.
I admittedly used to be that guy a little bit, back in the day, and I've decided that the best way for me to still capture and keep a visual
memory
of my life and not be that person, is to just record that one second that will allow me to trigger that
memory
of, "Yeah, that concert was amazing.
And a molecule of epinephrine ... it has no
memory
of its origin.
Soon after, when I was walking past a train station, I saw something terrible that to this day I can't erase from my
memory.
Other people who are a little more sophisticated, using more working memory, say, "I think people will pick 33 because they're going to pick a response to 50, and so I'll pick 22, which is two-thirds of 33."
So this is an amazing
memory
test from Nagoya, Japan, Primate Research Institute, where they've done a lot of this research.
They're interested in working
memory.
It's thousands of processors, a terabyte of memory, trillions of bytes of
memory.
It had a separate
memory
and central processor.
So there are areas of the brain that are dedicated to controlling your movement or your vision or your
memory
or your appetite, and so on.
When the malfunction is in a circuit that regulates your mood, you get things like depression, and when it is in a circuit that controls your
memory
and cognitive function, then you get things like Alzheimer's disease.
So what we've decided to do is we're going to try to turbocharge the
memory
circuits in the brain.
We're going to place electrodes within the circuits that regulate your
memory
and cognitive function to see if we can turn up their activity.
We're going to do this in people that have cognitive deficits, and we've chosen to treat patients with Alzheimer's disease who have cognitive and
memory
deficits.
So we've placed electrodes within this circuit in an area of the brain called the fornix, which is the highway in and out of this
memory
circuit, with the idea to see if we can turn on this
memory
circuit, and whether that can, in turn, help these patients with Alzheimer's disease.
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