• Researchers then analyzed the rats' brains at a cellular level. (sciencedaily.com)
  • According to researchers from Oxford University, our brains contain detailed "maps" of our hands and fingers which persist even for decades after amputation. (ibtimes.co.uk)
  • The researchers from Oxford's Hand and Brain Lab used a high-power MRI scanner to examine the brain activity in two people who had lost their left hand through amputation 25 and 31 years ago respectively, but who still experienced vivid phantom sensations, as well as 11 people who had both hands and were also right-handed. (ibtimes.co.uk)
  • In this study, researchers used the network to recognise and remember sequences of electrical pulses corresponding to images, inspired by the way the human brain processes information. (edu.au)
  • According to researchers at Wageningen University & Research, this is because our evolutionary ancestors needed to remember where high-calorie food could be found that could keep them alive. (boingboing.net)
  • The remember-know paradigm has changed the way in which researchers can study memory tasks and has had implications on what were originally considered purely "episodic" memories, which can now be thought of as a combination of both remembering and knowing or episodic and semantic. (wikipedia.org)
  • When applied to the nanowire network, the researchers found it could 'remember' a desired endpoint in an electric circuit seven steps back, meaning a score of 7 in an N-Back test. (nanotechnologyworld.org)
  • Gay men can recall familiar faces faster and more accurately than their heterosexual counterparts because, like women, they use both sides of their brains, according to a new study by York University researchers. (yorku.ca)
  • The team's latest findings challenge established thinking in neuroscience by demonstrating that the brain adapts to new circumstances and maintains levels of activity despite a significant loss of inputs. (ibtimes.co.uk)
  • So that's one of the big motivations for me to study neuroscience, particularly study how our brain thinks and how the memory is stored. (kbbi.org)
  • The study, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences , provides a unique example of how neuroscience research can inform new computer science strategies, and, conversely, how AI technology can help scientists better understand the human brain. (techxplore.com)
  • Exploring the field of neuroscience and its relevance to understanding how our brains learn and remember. (metropetmag.com)
  • Neuroscience is a captivating field that delves into the intricate workings of the brain, unraveling the mysteries behind learning and memory. (metropetmag.com)
  • Thus, there is an urgent need for scholars and practitioners in these disciplines to educate themselves about the structure, function, and development of the brain, and to explore the neuroscience literature connected with their areas of professional expertise. (researchgate.net)
  • Spatial memory is the cognitive process for remembering and recalling the location of objects in relation to yourself and other objects. (boingboing.net)
  • We're more likely to remember sweet things, which was a real plus for most of our evolutionary history," Purdue University cognitive psychology professor James Nairne, who was not involved in the research, commented to Scientific American . (boingboing.net)
  • In this research we found higher-order cognitive function, which we normally associate with the human brain, can be emulated in non-biological hardware," Dr Loeffler said. (nanotechnologyworld.org)
  • When you look at parts of the brain involved in higher cognitive functions, you tend to find that the same areas, even the same cells, participate in many different functions. (techxplore.com)
  • In order to have a more in-depth analysis of your brain health visit our Cognitive Assessment Battery and Brain Training Programs. (cognifit.com)
  • Use the power of our technology to improve your brain health and discover cognitive issues that may occur with you or a family member. (cognifit.com)
  • Remembering utilizes episodic memory and requires a deeper level of processing (e.g. undivided attention) than knowing. (wikipedia.org)
  • Remembering involves retrieval from episodic memory and knowing involves retrieval from semantic memory. (wikipedia.org)
  • At the same time the explicit, or episodic, memory that records specific events does not carry information over that three-year gap, explaining why people do not remember their births . (howstuffworks.com)
  • The Defense and Veterans Brain Injury Center (DVBIC) reported nearly 414,000 TBIs among U.S. service members worldwide between 2000 and late 2019. (expertclick.com)
  • Through neuroplasticity, the brain forms new neural connections and rewires existing ones, allowing individuals to acquire new skills, knowledge, and behaviors. (metropetmag.com)
  • This blog reports new ideas and work on mind, brain, behavior, psychology, and politics - as well as random curious stuff. (dericbownds.net)
  • The results may also provide some clue for locating new candidate brain areas as signal sources for motor BCI application or developing more sophisticated algorithm to reconstruct complex motor behavior. (tunedinmusictherapy.com)
  • effects on brain development, including changes in behavior and decreases in the ability to learn and Has the federal government made remember. (cdc.gov)
  • These areas of the brain are generally associated with personality and behavior. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Kolb, Bryan, & Whishaw, Ian Q. An Introduction to Brain and Behavior (4th ed. (lu.se)
  • But how much do babies remember about the world around them, and what details do their brains need to absorb in order to help them keep track of those things? (neurosciencenews.com)
  • Prepare to be amazed as we unravel the secrets behind how our brains absorb information, make connections, and store memories. (metropetmag.com)
  • Neuroscientists think this is how the brain works, certain synaptic connections strengthen while others weaken, and that's thought to be how we preferentially remember some things, how we learn and so on. (nanotechnologyworld.org)
  • However, a new study from University of Chicago neuroscientists found that adapting a well-known brain mechanism can dramatically improve the ability of artificial neural networks to learn multiple tasks and avoid the persistent AI challenge of "catastrophic forgetting. (techxplore.com)
  • In 2017, Ronnie's sister Wendy Wilkins, a florist, held a Christmas wreath-making day to raise funds for Brain Tumour Research and, in 2018, Ronnie and his family shared his story to launch our Christmas appeal. (braintumourresearch.org)
  • It is also found that the hippocampus is differently activated during recall of "remembered" (vs. familiar) stimuli. (wikipedia.org)
  • Plants have evolved a variety of mechanisms that 'remember' external stimuli as part of numerous processes, including acclimation to harsh environments, systemic acquired resistance to pathogens and vernalization. (mindmatters.ai)
  • Published in a recent issue of the journal Psychological Science , the study reveals that even though very young babies can't remember the details of an object that they were shown and which then was hidden, the infants' brains have a set of built in "pointers" that help them retain a notion that something they saw remains in existence even when they can't see it anymore. (neurosciencenews.com)
  • This study addresses one of the classic problems in the study of infant development: What information do infants need to remember about an object in order to remember that it still exists once it is out of their view? (neurosciencenews.com)
  • The team found that even though infants cannot remember the shapes of two hidden objects, they are surprised when those objects disappear completely. (neurosciencenews.com)
  • Infants do, indeed, remember an object's existence without remembering what that object is. (neurosciencenews.com)
  • Infants use this sense to keep track of objects without having to remember what those objects are. (neurosciencenews.com)
  • Later, placed under the same mobile without the ribbon, the infants remembered to kick their legs. (howstuffworks.com)
  • Topics include vision and the brain, depression and the brain, happiness and the brain, the sex act and the brain, development of the brain in infants, development of the brain in adolescents, and aging and the brain. (wondrium.com)
  • Infant psychology is mysterious in part because we cannot remember our first months of life, nor can we directly communicate with infants. (lu.se)
  • Lead author Ruomin Zhu, a PhD student from the University of Sydney Nano Institute and School of Physics , said: "The findings demonstrate how brain-inspired learning and memory functions using nanowire networks can be harnessed to process dynamic, streaming data. (edu.au)
  • Our previous research established the ability of nanowire networks to remember simple tasks. (edu.au)
  • An international team led by scientists at the University of Sydney has demonstrated nanowire networks can exhibit both short- and long-term memory like the human brain. (nanotechnologyworld.org)
  • While the rats had no memory of being exposed to the odor under anesthesia, changes in the brain tissue on a cellular level suggested the rats "remembered" the exposure to the odor under anesthesia and no longer registered the odor as novel. (sciencedaily.com)
  • Known as 'resistive memory switching', this function is created when electrical inputs encounter changes in conductivity, similar to what happens with synapses in our brain. (edu.au)
  • Supervising researcher Professor Zdenka Kuncic said the memory task was similar to remembering a phone number. (edu.au)
  • Our novel approach allows the nanowire neural network to learn and remember 'on the fly', sample by sample, extracting data online, thus avoiding heavy memory and energy usage. (edu.au)
  • We found that a particular part of the medial temporal lobe, a brain region known to be critical for intact memory, spontaneously reactivates these events even when we are engaged in unrelated activities. (dericbownds.net)
  • Even though she wasn't regularly playing the piano during the study, that tells us that perhaps the memory your brain has of controlling those muscles still exists," Daneshgar says. (colorado.edu)
  • Turns out, our spatial memory also evolved to more easily remember where chocolate brownies than cherry tomatoes. (boingboing.net)
  • Be it positive or negative, a new study shows how the brain associates the sound of an alarm or any memory with a feeling. (kbbi.org)
  • What's happening in my brain that associates that feeling with that memory? (kbbi.org)
  • A lot of studies have shown that human brains are using a very similar circuit to rodent brains in terms of emotional or memory processing or learning those basic survival skills. (kbbi.org)
  • She's got a plant that not only "remembered" what happened to it but stored that memory for almost a month. (nationalgeographic.com)
  • It appears that "remembering" and "knowing" represent relatively different characteristics of memory as well as reflect different ways of using memory. (wikipedia.org)
  • For instance, we can recall what we did last night by simply traveling back in time through memory and episodically imagining what we did (remember) or we can know something about our past such as a phone number, but have no specific memory of where the specific memory came from (know). (wikipedia.org)
  • Episodic and semantic memory give rise to two different states of consciousness, autonoetic and noetic, which influence two kinds of subjective experience: remembering and knowing, respectively. (wikipedia.org)
  • This is important, Kibbe explains, because it sheds light on the brain mechanisms that support memory in infancy and beyond. (neurosciencenews.com)
  • Our current work paves the way towards replicating brain-like learning and memory in non-biological hardware systems and suggests that the underlying nature of brain-like intelligence may be physical. (nanotechnologyworld.org)
  • When we implement that, its memory had much higher accuracy and didn't really decrease over time, suggesting that we've found a way to strengthen the pathways to push them towards where we want them, and then the network remembers it. (nanotechnologyworld.org)
  • It's kind of like the difference between long-term memory and short-term memory in our brains," Professor Kuncic said. (nanotechnologyworld.org)
  • For a long time, the rationale behind childhood amnesia rested on the assumption that the memory-making parts of babies' brains were undeveloped. (howstuffworks.com)
  • To form memories, humans must create synapses , or connections between brain cells , that encode sensory information from an event into our memory. (howstuffworks.com)
  • These networks enable the brain to perform various functions, including perception, memory, and decision-making. (metropetmag.com)
  • Understanding the intricacies of memory formation can provide valuable insights into how our brains create, store, and retrieve information. (metropetmag.com)
  • We all have that one event that we will remember for the rest of our lives, whether it is a happy memory such as a wedding, childbirth, a successful b. (bcimpeach.com)
  • Recent studies in our laboratory indicate that peptide SP generated in the rat brain during the formation of memory of dark avoidance is transported by kinesin and binds to KLC3 (light chain of kinesin 3). (researchgate.net)
  • This paper will also discuss the silencing of numerous genes in the brain, which contributes to the decline of memory in Alzheimer's disease and aging. (researchgate.net)
  • Early detection of memory loss and brain problems with visualized results to help you spot warning signs you or your family member might miss. (cognifit.com)
  • CogniFit offers this test to the world to help educate people about their Brain Health with a short simple memory test. (cognifit.com)
  • So it's talking about the different types of memories and why we might remember good things over bad things. (kbbi.org)
  • Remembering is a knowledge-based and conceptually-driven form of processing that can be influenced by many things. (wikipedia.org)
  • Our results seem to indicate that the brain has a set of 'pointers' that it uses to pick out the things in the world that we need to keep track of," explains Kibbe, who did the majority of the work on this study while pursuing her doctorate in Leslie's laboratory at Rutgers. (neurosciencenews.com)
  • Now that we're moving into post-pandemic teaching, educators need to remember certain things for their instructional approach. (techlearning.com)
  • The drugs used to treat cancer can cause some people to have trouble concentrating or remembering things. (cdc.gov)
  • People who can no longer recognize faces compensate with heightened voice recognition abilities, says a York University study, which also finds that our brains may identify people and things on separate neurological planes. (yorku.ca)
  • Do you ever struggle to remember things? (cognifit.com)
  • I remember the great things about my friend. (philadelphiaeagles.com)
  • Over the past several years, scientists have looked deeper into how brains age and confirmed that they continue to develop through and beyond middle age, " writes Barbara Strauch for the New York Times. (aipathome.com)
  • Scientists have confirmed that brains continue to develop during and beyond middle age. (aipathome.com)
  • By exploring the connections between neurons and unraveling the complex neural networks, scientists aim to understand how our brains acquire knowledge and retain information. (metropetmag.com)
  • Examining the concept of neuroplasticity and how the brain adapts and changes through learning experiences. (metropetmag.com)
  • Aging brains get better at seeing the big picture. (aipathome.com)
  • This study reveals important new information about how anesthesia affects our brains," said Dr. Xu. (sciencedaily.com)
  • It has been thought that the hand 'picture' in the brain, located in the primary somatosensory cortex, could only be maintained by regular sensory input from the hand", said Dr. Tamar Makin, a lead author of the study. (ibtimes.co.uk)
  • Study leader, Ms. Sanne Kikkert said: "We found that while there was less brain activity related to the left hand in the amputees, the specific patterns making up the composition of the hand picture still matched well to the two-handed people in the control group. (ibtimes.co.uk)
  • In a new study published in a journal Neuron, Atsushi Yokoi, Center for Information and Neural Networks (CiNet), NICT, and Jörn Diedrichsen, Brain and Mind Institute, Western Univ. (tunedinmusictherapy.com)
  • said Melissa Kibbe, a postdoctoral researcher in the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences at the Krieger School of Arts and Sciences at Johns Hopkins, who collaborated with colleague Alan Leslie at Rutgers University on the study. (neurosciencenews.com)
  • A UCLA study showed that social anxiety increases inflammatory activity of those parts of the brain that trigger immune system functions. (lifehack.org)
  • Previous research has led to the belief that sensory information is received by the brain under general anesthesia but not perceived by it. (sciencedaily.com)
  • These new findings suggest the brain not only receives sensory information, but also registers the information at the cellular level while anesthetized without behavioral reporting of the same information after recovering from anesthesia. (sciencedaily.com)
  • The fact that an anesthetized brain can receive sensory information -- and distinguish whether that information is novel or familiar during and after anesthesia, even if one does not remember receiving it -- suggests a need to re-evaluate how the depth of anesthesia should be measured clinically. (sciencedaily.com)
  • It seems that even, as previously thought, the brain does carry out reorganisation when sensory inputs are lost, it does not erase the original function of a brain area", said Kikkert. (ibtimes.co.uk)
  • Encoding refers to the conversion of sensory information into a form that can be stored in the brain. (metropetmag.com)
  • The new findings, published in the journal eLife Sciences , challenge traditional views of how the brain works and could have implications for the next generation of prosthetics. (ibtimes.co.uk)
  • We confirmed our findings by working with a third amputee, who had also experienced a loss of any communication between the remaining part of their arm and their brain. (ibtimes.co.uk)
  • After five years of debate, the INTERPHONE epidemiologists recently published their findings on brain cancer , but their paper raise more questions than it answers. (cdc.gov)
  • There is evidence suggesting that different processes are involved in remembering something versus knowing whether it is familiar. (wikipedia.org)
  • Frontotemporal dementia, which refers to a group of dementias, results from hereditary or spontaneous (occurring for unknown reasons) disorders that cause the frontal and sometimes the temporal lobe of the brain to degenerate. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Understanding the basic building blocks of neurons and neural networks is crucial for unraveling the mysteries of the brain and advancing our knowledge of cognition and consciousness. (metropetmag.com)
  • The question of when consciousness, or subjective experience, begins in human development thus remains incompletely answered, though boundaries can be set using current knowledge from developmental neurobiology and recent investigations of the perinatal brain. (lu.se)
  • Examination of the brain tissue after they had recovered from anesthesia revealed evidence of cellular imprinting, even though the rats behaved as if they had never encountered the odor before. (sciencedaily.com)
  • The only way to confirm the presence of the rabies virus in an animal is to test brain tissue. (cdc.gov)
  • Alzheimer Disease Alzheimer disease is a progressive loss of mental function, characterized by degeneration of brain tissue, including loss of nerve cells, the accumulation of an abnormal protein called beta-amyloid. (msdmanuals.com)
  • If that was the case, people who have undergone hand amputation would show extremely low or no activity related to its original focus in that brain area - in our case, the hand. (ibtimes.co.uk)
  • We wanted to look at the information underlying brain activity in phantom movements, to see how it varied from the brain activity of people moving actual hands and fingers. (ibtimes.co.uk)
  • Some activities that people do-playing a musical instrument, rock climbing-can be very beneficial for manual dexterity, and even if they're done earlier in life, the brain may remember controlling those muscles. (colorado.edu)
  • Remember, research shows that people with social anxiety are on "high alert" all of the time. (lifehack.org)
  • People may claim they remember the first moments of life but do they really? (howstuffworks.com)
  • A Test scientifically validated through dozens of peer reviewed journals and is actively used in drug trial research, global research initiatives like The Brain Health Registry at UCSF, and non-profit lead support from The Alzheimer's Foundation of America. (cognifit.com)
  • In order for us to retain any information in our brain, we have to refresh it periodically with specific time intervals. (lifehack.org)
  • Done properly - and the VA and DOD so far are not doing it properly - root cause analysis of the "mental health" condition of combat veterans and the families of those veterans, will discover an epidemic of brain wounds large and small among the force. (expertclick.com)
  • To protect your health when temperatures are extremely high, remember to keep cool and use common sense. (cdc.gov)
  • For example, a musical piece may be remembered as a sequence of smaller chunks, with each chunk representing a group of often co-occurring notes. (tunedinmusictherapy.com)
  • Time flows continuously, so why do we remember events in chunks of time? (medlineplus.gov)
  • For the first time, a physical neural network has successfully been shown to learn and remember 'on the fly', in a way inspired by and similar to how the brain's neurons work. (edu.au)
  • Remember that the next time work leaves you feeling overwhelmed. (oberlo.com)
  • Before learning about spaced repetition systems, it's important to understand how our brains work. (lifehack.org)
  • This work builds on our previous research in which we showed how nanotechnology could be used to build a brain-inspired electrical device with neural network-like circuitry and synapse-like signalling. (nanotechnologyworld.org)
  • Through this intricate network of connections, neurons work together to create the remarkable complexity of the human brain. (metropetmag.com)
  • Start with a culturally responsive mindset , and remember to continue to acknowledge and reflect on your own implicit biases that you may be bringing into your work as a teacher. (techlearning.com)
  • While becoming a way of life and work, the radio frequency (RF) waves from cell phones have also been depositing energy into users' brains. (cdc.gov)
  • Research has shown that shift work and long work hours are associated with: declines in functioning of the brain (thinking, remembering, etc. (cdc.gov)
  • On today's show, we remember Reubens and Pee-wee by listening back to interviews with him and some of the cast members of his hit children's TV series "Pee-wee's Playhouse. (wmfe.org)
  • Remember and know responses are quite often differentiated by their functional correlates in specific areas in the brain. (wikipedia.org)
  • This would remove a barrier to neuro-prosthetics - prosthetic limbs controlled directly by the brain - the assumption that a person would lose the brain area that could control the prosthetic. (ibtimes.co.uk)
  • The brain continues to change and improve its ability for more complex understanding. (aipathome.com)
  • Understanding the basic building blocks of the brain and how they form complex networks to process information. (metropetmag.com)
  • He calls one thing emphasized by Dr. Norden in Understanding the Brain a "myth. (wondrium.com)
  • This course provides a good overview understanding of various ways the brain works. (wondrium.com)
  • These results uncovered the first detailed map of cortical sequence representation in the human brain. (tunedinmusictherapy.com)
  • The wires mimic aspects of the networked physical structure of a human brain. (nanotechnologyworld.org)
  • Seth O'Neal] Neurocysticercosis is a disease that occurs when larvae of the pork tapeworm infect the human brain, forming cysts. (cdc.gov)
  • Though based loosely on the way neurons communicate in the brain, these "deep learning" systems remain incapable of many basic functions that would be essential for primates and other organisms. (techxplore.com)
  • By contrast, the brain is capable of "continual learning," acquiring new knowledge without eliminating old memories, even when the same neurons are used for multiple tasks. (techxplore.com)
  • Neurons are the fundamental units of the brain, responsible for processing and transmitting information. (metropetmag.com)
  • The brain is composed of more than a thousand billion neurons. (medlineplus.gov)
  • form_title':'The Write Side of My Brain','form_subtitle':null,'currency_search_text':'Country or Currency here','other_payment_option':'Other payment option','manage_payments_button_text':'Manage your payments','thank_you_message':'Thank you for being a supporter! (thewritesideofmybrain.com)
  • Like a collection of 'Pick Up Sticks', the self-arranged network of nanowires mimics the synapse function of the brain. (edu.au)
  • Signals from the brain are controlling function and practicing aids learning. (colorado.edu)
  • To function properly, the brain needs nutrients and the primary source of these. (bcimpeach.com)
  • Rats' brains may remember odors they were exposed to while deeply anesthetized, suggests research. (sciencedaily.com)
  • But the brain suggests there's probably some efficient way of packing in lots of knowledge into a fairly small network. (techxplore.com)
  • Bruising or bleeding on the head and scalp and blood in the ear canal or behind the tympanic membranes may be clues to occult brain injuries. (medscape.com)
  • Psychologists refer to this inability of most adults to remember events from early life, including their birth, as childhood amnesia . (howstuffworks.com)
  • Please join me in remembering and honoring Chuck and his incredible life of purpose. (atlanticphilanthropies.org)
  • The story here, though, is the way we remember Brown and think of the life he led. (philadelphiaeagles.com)
  • Principal investigator Elisabeth Cardis said, "Overall, my opinion is that the results show a real effect… It is too early to make strong recommendations to adults and children concerning the use of phones… But there are ways to limit exposure to the brain from mobile telephones, through the use of [text messaging], speakers or other hands-free devices. (cdc.gov)
  • The best way to remember/produce long and complex motor sequences is to divide them into several smaller pieces recursively. (tunedinmusictherapy.com)
  • For a person, the N-Back task might involve remembering a specific picture of a cat from a series of feline images presented in a sequence. (nanotechnologyworld.org)
  • For example, Pick disease is a term used to describe some of the changes in the brain caused by a specific type of frontotemporal dementia. (msdmanuals.com)
  • The left side of the brain controls the muscles on the right side of the body and vice versa. (medlineplus.gov)
  • This course is essentially a collection of topical lectures loosely connected by brain science. (wondrium.com)
  • RASCOE: So then I got to ask because it almost seems like in modern day with humans, we can be anxious and remember those bad experiences that we don't want to remember as much. (kbbi.org)
  • The remember-know paradigm began its journey in 1985 from the mind of Endel Tulving. (wikipedia.org)
  • Seeking to thrive and grow, plants communicate extensively, without a mind or a brain. (mindmatters.ai)
  • And, most interesting, is that long held views of disappearing brain cells and related information, knowlege and learning have been replaced with the belief that all that data is just buried away in the nooks and crannies of our brains. (aipathome.com)
  • What makes our brains so interesting, though, is that even long-held pieces of information can be forgotten if we don't run into it enough. (lifehack.org)
  • Lost in the "Rolling to Remember" rallies, in too many cases, are the avoidable deaths that are little noted nor long remembered. (expertclick.com)
  • Aside from the fact most of us probably don't remember much of anything we learned in high school at this point, even younger generations will have a tougher time retaining that knowledge. (lifehack.org)
  • For instance, during "remember" situations it is found that there is greater EEG activity than "knowing", specifically, due to an interaction between frontal and posterior regions of the brain. (wikipedia.org)
  • One strategy the brain uses for this learning challenge is the selective activation of cells or cellular components for different tasks-essentially turning on smaller, overlapping sub-networks for each individual skill, or under different contexts. (techxplore.com)
  • Essentially, many plants "remember" when they have been subjected to cold temperatures and they produce fertile seeds only afterwards. (mindmatters.ai)
  • Doctors base the diagnosis on symptoms and results of a neurologic examination and use imaging tests to assess the brain damage. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Sarah Gregory] Neurocysticercosis, which is brain infection with Taenia solinium larval cysts, causes substantial neurologic illness around the world. (cdc.gov)
  • I mean, it seems like it would make sense that if you hear something that should be associated with danger, it would be good to remember that. (kbbi.org)
  • This is sometimes called "chemo brain," and it can make it hard for cancer patients to do their jobs or everyday tasks. (cdc.gov)
  • Plants may lack brains," Gagliano says in her paper, "but they do possess a sophisticated … signaling network. (nationalgeographic.com)
  • The idea was to draw inspiration from what the brain does in order to solve challenges with neural networks. (techxplore.com)
  • Can a person remember being born? (howstuffworks.com)
  • Digital transformation of companies: what to remember about the person of Eric Minoli? (bcimpeach.com)
  • I've been listening to the version by Gladys Knight, and she says memories may be beautiful, and yet what's too painful to remember, we simply choose to forget. (kbbi.org)