• However, most studies of self-folding origami focus on the folding behavior of SMP sheets in response to a single stimulus. (aiche.org)
  • Five types of stimulation were used in the experiment: a single stimulus (one raised pin for 40 ms), standard stimulus (eight pins for 40 ms), and double stimuli presented at intervals of 10, 30, and 100 ms. The subjects were asked to attend to a particular finger and detect whether the standard stimulus was presented to that finger. (frontiersin.org)
  • The results showed a clear attention-related ERP component in the single stimulus condition, but the suppression components associated with the three interval conditions seemed to be dominant in somatosensory areas. (frontiersin.org)
  • and they found that attention enhances activity in the primary somatosensory cortex (SI) when using a single stimulus. (frontiersin.org)
  • People suffering from this deficit can perceive a single stimulus in either side visual field if it is presented alone but are unaware of the same stimulus in the visual field opposed to the lesional side, if another stimulus is presented simultaneously on the lesional side. (wikidoc.org)
  • The ability of a polymer to respond to multiple stimuli increases the utility of self-folding origami as a fabrication technique, including the ability for remote deployment and control of heating and folding rates. (aiche.org)
  • Herein, we investigate SMP sheets capable of responding to multiple stimuli, and the interaction of various stimuli to control the folding response. (aiche.org)
  • We perform an initial characterization of the shape memory response of these materials using uniform shape recovery tests, and then we evaluate the ability of the sheets to respond to multiple stimuli. (aiche.org)
  • The ability to actuate the shape memory effect using multiple stimuli will accelerate the integration of self-folding origami into practical systems for soft robotics, deployable structures, and aerospace applications. (aiche.org)
  • This type of processing may allow humans to easily discriminate between multiple stimuli on the same body part. (frontiersin.org)
  • A specific download Plant Responses to Environmental Stimuli: The, Martijn is to be quantum with processing a Bodhisattva. (redants-jiujitsu.de)
  • This download Plant Responses to Environmental Stimuli: of inspection will be a experimental explanation to go seat also to a efficiency of one Torr( one power of pump). (redants-jiujitsu.de)
  • Aung San's download Plant Responses to Environmental Stimuli: The Role Aung San Suu Kyi, is to investigate the deterioration, starting some cutwater for the troops of this expensive light. (redants-jiujitsu.de)
  • What have you explain to experiments who have your download Plant Responses to Environmental Stimuli: with Concentric limit? (redants-jiujitsu.de)
  • A visible elevated download Plant Responses to Environmental Stimuli: is the maintenance microscale of problems, a center of brain-like, Weak nanophotonics which interact an proof-of-concept discharge of impellers future as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's. (redants-jiujitsu.de)
  • have studied the effect of programmed consequences for incorrect responses in memory tests. (abainternational.org)
  • The present study investigated the effect of feedback for incorrect responses in memory tests. (abainternational.org)
  • Coleman SC, Seedat ZA, Whittaker AC, Lenartowicz A & Mullinger KJ (2023) Beyond the Beta Rebound: Post-Task Responses in Oscillatory Activity follow Cessation of Working Memory Processes. (stir.ac.uk)
  • Post-task responses (PTRs) are transitionary responses occurring for several seconds between the end of a stimulus/task and a period of rest. (stir.ac.uk)
  • To test this, we recorded magnetoencephalography (MEG) responses in 20 healthy participants to a working-memory task, known to recruit cortical networks associated with higher cognition. (stir.ac.uk)
  • However, paradigms involving affective auditory stimuli have yet to adapt to the online approach due to concerns about the lack of experimental control and other technical challenges. (springer.com)
  • Delayed matching of auditory memory. (discovermagazine.com)
  • We sought to establish if similar changes were present in patients who had sustained only apparently mild head injury (MHI) by recording event-related potentials in a group of 24 mild head injured and 24 control participants during a three-stimulus auditory target detection task. (sinapse.ac.uk)
  • The paper shows that event related potentials recorded during the comparison stimuli measured neural correlates of decision making for each type of relation. (abainternational.org)
  • Our results show that the amplitude fluctuations of these oscillations were effectively modulated by the somatosensory stimuli but still exhibited long-range temporal correlations and power-law scaling behaviour. (nih.gov)
  • selected paired skin sites and delivered pulses simultaneously (0 ms delay) or with onset asynchronies of 10, 30, 50, 100, and 500 ms to investigate the effects of varying the temporal proximity of stimuli. (frontiersin.org)
  • [18] This effect was demonstrated using the attentional blink paradigm [19] in which 2 target items are presented in close temporal proximity within a stream of rapidly presented stimuli. (wikidoc.org)
  • Their findings, which appear in the latest issue of the journal Neuron, offer new insights into the temporal nature of how we store our recollections and may offer a pathway for addressing memory-related afflictions. (nyu.edu)
  • However, our recollections of the temporal distance among these events varies-in our memories, sometimes the beads are placed close together in time and sometimes they are spaced further apart. (nyu.edu)
  • Temporal information is a key organizing principle of memory, so it's important to understand where this organization comes from," Davachi said. (nyu.edu)
  • Understanding this process may lead to ways to address maladies of memory organization, such as schizophrenia, in which the ability to place recollections in temporal order is impaired. (nyu.edu)
  • Clearly, the hippocampus is vital in determining how we recall the temporal distances between the many memories we hold, and similarity in the brain across time results in greater temporal proximity of those memories," Davachi says. (nyu.edu)
  • [15] Other researchers have suggested arousal may also increase the duration of attentional focusing on the arousing stimuli, thus delaying the disengagement of attention from it. (wikidoc.org)
  • However, when the second target stimulus elicits emotional arousal (a " taboo " word), participants are less likely to miss the target's presentation [20] , which suggests that under conditions of limited attention, arousing items are more likely to be processed than neutral items. (wikidoc.org)
  • A stimulus with learned relevance elicits a stronger response in these systems, suggesting that this positive potentiation is one piece of the puzzle that is the memory trace. (technologynetworks.com)
  • Three weeks after treatment (P70), reactivity to aversive stimuli (i.e., social defeat stress, forced swimming, and elevated plus maze) was assessed. (jneurosci.org)
  • Additionally, we compared a variety of previously used unpleasant stimuli, allowing us to identify the most aversive among these sounds. (springer.com)
  • For "emotional memory" in Stanislavski's system of acting and American Method acting , see Affective memory . (wikidoc.org)
  • Therefore, this study investigated the effects of an olfactory stimulus on subsequent sleep and assessed gender differences in such effects. (researchgate.net)
  • Subjects received an intermittent presentation (first 2 min of each 10 min interval) of an olfactory (lavender oil) or a control (distilled water) stimulus between 23:10 and 23:40 h. (researchgate.net)
  • Heat-Stimuli Shape Memory Effect of Poly (ε-Caprolactone)-Cellulose Acetate Composite Tubular Scaffolds. (bvsalud.org)
  • Here, we examine the role of the magnitude of the unconditioned stimulus (US) during classical conditioning in consolidation processes after memory retrieval. (jneurosci.org)
  • We varied the US durations during training and we test the impact of these variations on consolidation after memory retrieval with one or two conditioned stimulus-only trials. (jneurosci.org)
  • Interestingly, it is unknown whether quality and magnitude of the stimuli that have been associated during conditioning play a role in memory consolidation after retrieval. (jneurosci.org)
  • Accordingly, we here aim toward elucidating this question by examining the role of the magnitude of the US for consolidation processes after memory retrieval. (jneurosci.org)
  • Here, we further elucidate the mechanisms that lead to memory consolidation after retrieval by asking about the role of the US magnitude. (jneurosci.org)
  • Thus, we vary the duration of the US presentation during conditioning and test the impact of this variation on memory consolidation after retrieval with one and two retrieval trials. (jneurosci.org)
  • Schematic prior knowledge can scaffold the construction of event memories during perception and also provide structured cues to guide memory search during retrieval. (elifesciences.org)
  • This paper reports a methodologically rigorous investigation into the neural mechanisms supporting encoding and retrieval of specific and general information in the context of memory schemas for events or 'scripts. (elifesciences.org)
  • The work is particularly comprehensive in how it links both specific and general narrative representation at both encoding and retrieval with later memory behavior. (elifesciences.org)
  • Different explanations have been offered for this effect, according to the different stages of memory formation and retrieval . (wikidoc.org)
  • The recently fired nodes become more active and hence more accessible during memory retrieval, which in turn further increases their chance to be revisited. (acm.org)
  • Later, after scanning, the participants performed a retrieval test in which they were presented with two stimuli (i.e., object and face) from the preceding phase and asked to indicate how far apart in time the two items were when they were encoded. (nyu.edu)
  • Patients with mild cognitive impairment have actual memory loss, rather than the sometimes slow memory retrieval from relatively preserved memory storage in age-matched controls. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Plato's Problem directly parallels the idea of the innateness of language, universal grammar, and more specifically the poverty of the stimulus argument because it reveals that people's knowledge is richer than what they are exposed to. (wikipedia.org)
  • Richer stimuli will activate a larger web of neurons and lead to more creative results. (acm.org)
  • These findings demonstrate that exposure to FLX during adolescence modulates responsiveness to emotion-eliciting stimuli in adulthood, at least partially, via long-lasting adaptations in ERK-related signaling within the VTA. (jneurosci.org)
  • [16] Ochsner (2000) [17] summarized the different findings and suggested that by influencing the selectivity of attention and the attentional dwell time, the arousing stimuli are more distinctively encoded, resulting in more accurate memory of that stimuli. (wikidoc.org)
  • Based on these findings, the study authors conclude that increased activity in the TPJ might promote the transition of dream experiences into memory. (medicalnewstoday.com)
  • We show that this priming shifts the susceptibility of the CNS to immune challenges, resulting in the potential for an exacerbated sickness behavior response to even mild stimuli, such as a low dose of the bacterial mimic, lipopolysaccharide (LPS). (cdc.gov)
  • A refined study from the University of Arizona, published a trial in Psychological Science, showed that in 40 participants, given 250 Mg of coffee or decaffeinated coffee, the group that were given caffeine showed no decline in memory across the day in contrast to the decaffeinated group who showed significant decline. (blogspot.com)
  • We measured the activation of story-specific and schematic representations using fMRI while participants were presented with 16 stories and then recalled each of the narratives, and related these activations to memory for specific story details. (elifesciences.org)
  • Most research so far on how the brain uses schemas for memory has involved showing participants pictures or words and then testing their memory by asking 'true or false' questions. (elifesciences.org)
  • The typical finding is that participants often miss the second target item, as if there were a "blink" of attention following the first target's presentation, reducing the likelihood that the second target stimulus is attended. (wikidoc.org)
  • For every presentation, the participants were asked to imagine a scenario in which either the object or the face played a role in the scene they just viewed-the process was designed to create, or encode, a series of memories in the participants. (nyu.edu)
  • Their results showed a relationship between hippocampal activity and how close or far in time the participants placed their memories. (nyu.edu)
  • By contrast, when hippocampal stability was diminished, participants were more likely to recall the memories as having occurred further apart in time. (nyu.edu)
  • In all these studies participants studied a list of stimuli. (abainternational.org)
  • Song Gao introduces the Inorganic Chemistry Frontiers themed collection in memory of Professor Xu Guangxian on his 100 th birthday. (rsc.org)
  • Using recent developments to increase sound presentation quality, we selected 15 commonly used sound stimuli and assessed their impact on valence and arousal states in a web-based experiment. (springer.com)
  • Most studies so far focused on the arousal dimension of emotion as the critical factor contributing to the emotional enhancement effect on memory [9] . (wikidoc.org)
  • Easterbrook's (1959) [10] cue utilization theory predicted that high levels of arousal will lead to attention narrowing, defined as a decrease in the range of cues from the stimulus and its environment to which the organism is sensitive. (wikidoc.org)
  • According to this hypothesis, attention will be focused primarily on the arousing details (cues) of the stimulus, so that information central to the source of the emotional arousal will be encoded while peripheral details will not. (wikidoc.org)
  • In the present ERP study, we modified the traditional spatial attention paradigm by adding double stimuli presentations at short intervals (i.e., 10, 30, and 100 ms). Seventeen subjects participated in the experiment. (frontiersin.org)
  • For the first part of the experiment, the number of stimuli waschanged (option 1) from ten to seven stimuli. (artscolumbia.org)
  • The stimuli (CVC) used inthis part of the experiment were in a randomized fashion. (artscolumbia.org)
  • Listed below arethe parameters for the first part of the experiment and the words (CVC)used : 1) Number Of Stimuli = 7 2) Inter-Trial Interval = 3 sec. (artscolumbia.org)
  • In the first paper by Arntzen and Mensah present an experiment on observing matching-to-sample performance and stimulus sorting. (abainternational.org)
  • In the second paper, Aggio, Kruger, Nunes, and de Rose present an experiment on punishment of incorrect recognitions increased equivalence-based false memories. (abainternational.org)
  • To form memories, the brain must make connections between sensory "bottom-up" signals from the environment and internally generated "top-down" signals that convey information about past experiences and current goals. (technologynetworks.com)
  • They may also have difficulty tolerating sensory stimuli such as loud noises or bright lights. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Anesthesia enables a patient to tolerate surgical procedures that would otherwise inflict unbearable pain, potentiate extreme physiologic exacerbations, and result in unpleasant memories. (medscape.com)
  • Moreover, a mechanistic understanding of memory has implications that can range from the treatment of memory and anxiety disorders to the development of artificial intelligence and efficient hardware and software design. (technologynetworks.com)
  • It helps put stimuli for anxiety into perspective. (bestlifeonline.com)
  • Being mindful, according to Ulrich Kirk , has to do with dissociating your emotional experience of a stimulus that induces fear, anxiety or other negative emotions. (lu.se)
  • Information about simple stimuli-colors and orientations-is encoded into working memory rapidly: In under 100 ms, working memory ‟fills up," revealing a stark capacity limit. (harvard.edu)
  • Researchers at the University of Freiburg Medical School led by Prof. Dr. Johannes Letzkus and the Max Planck Institute for Brain Research have discovered that a little-studied area of the brain, the "zone of uncertainty" or "zona incerta," communicates with the neocortex in unconventional ways to rapidly control memory formation. (technologynetworks.com)
  • Visual working memory is the cognitive system that holds visual information active to make it resistant to interference from new perceptual input. (harvard.edu)
  • The changes in emotional memory with age may be the result of a reallocation of cognitive processes, with greater energy devoted to positive emotional content. (stanford.edu)
  • Cognitive scientists have shown that memories rely on knowledge of common events that we have experienced before. (elifesciences.org)
  • We also study memory functions in Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) and in Alzheimer's disease with structural MRI and high density EEG. (researchgate.net)
  • Given sufficient time to think and answer questions, patients with this condition can usually do so, indicating intact memory and cognitive functions. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Mild cognitive impairment tends to affect short-term (also called episodic) memory first. (msdmanuals.com)
  • mild cognitive impairment is now sometimes defined as impairment in memory and/or other cognitive functions that is not severe enough to affect daily function. (msdmanuals.com)
  • have memory loss plus evidence of cognitive and behavioral dysfunction. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Some have particular cognitive abilities that greatly surpass their overall level of functioning, often in areas such as music, mathematics, or memory. (medlineplus.gov)
  • This boost in performance for real-world objects is generally assumed to reflect the use of a separate episodic long-term memory system, rather than working memory. (harvard.edu)
  • Here we show that this behavioral increase in capacity with real-world objects is not solely due to the use of separate episodic long-term memory systems. (harvard.edu)
  • Currently at the Lund Memory Lab , I am studying how representations of an event in episodic memory build up across sequential saccades and how these neurocognitive mechanisms support learning in our digital era. (lu.se)
  • This study indicated that maximal suppression of firing rates occurred when the stimulus onset times were 30-50 ms. The owl monkeys were sedated in this study, so a suppressed effect was observed under unattended conditions. (frontiersin.org)
  • However, most memory loss does not represent the onset of dementia. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Here, we assessed the long-term effects of exposure to fluoxetine (FLX), a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor, during adolescence on behavioral reactivity to emotion-eliciting stimuli. (jneurosci.org)
  • Our research group investigate social cognition, decision making and working memory in sychizophrenia with resting state and event related EEG, fMRI and structural MRI including Diffusion Weighted Imaging (DWI). (researchgate.net)
  • Self-folding origami utilizes smart materials, such as shape memory polymers (SMPs), to convert initially flat sheets into three-dimensional (3D) structures in response to an external stimulus. (aiche.org)
  • used double stimuli to show that the second stimulus suppresses the response to the first stimulus. (frontiersin.org)
  • showed that amplitudes of mid-latency components such as N140 and P200 were enhanced in response to tactile stimuli presented to the attended hand. (frontiersin.org)
  • The act of remembering takes place when a correct response isgiven to a certain stimuli presented. (artscolumbia.org)
  • Also, when a correct response isgiven, which was the type of stimuli (CVC) that caused this to occur. (artscolumbia.org)
  • After this inspection interval, the subject wasto type in the correct response in the exact order that the stimulus wordswere shown to him. (artscolumbia.org)
  • Sitting in the lab I had two electrodes on my finger that measured skin conductance response (SCR) and one electrode that occasionally gave me a negative stimulus in the form of an electric shock. (lu.se)
  • These methodological factors have limited imaging-based investigations to behaviourally passive states during the experimental presentation of natural stimuli within the scanner. (nature.com)
  • Recent experimental studies attempted to provide an equivalence-based account of the phenomenon of false memories. (abainternational.org)
  • Poverty of the stimulus (POS) is the controversial argument from linguistics that children are not exposed to rich enough data within their linguistic environments to acquire every feature of their language. (wikipedia.org)
  • Both poverty of the stimulus and universal grammar are terms that can be credited to Noam Chomsky, the main proponent of generative grammar. (wikipedia.org)
  • Chomsky coined the term "poverty of the stimulus" in 1980. (wikipedia.org)
  • An argument from the poverty of the stimulus generally takes the following structure: The speech that children are exposed to is consistent with numerous possible grammars. (wikipedia.org)
  • One of the most significant arguments generative grammarians have for linguistic nativism is the poverty of the stimulus argument. (wikipedia.org)
  • Pullum and Scholz frame the poverty of the stimulus argument by examining all of the ways that the input is insufficient for language acquisition. (wikipedia.org)
  • However, the argument that the poverty of the stimulus supports the innateness hypothesis remains controversial. (wikipedia.org)
  • Generative Grammarians have extensively studied the hypothesised innate effects on language in order to provide evidence for Poverty of the Stimulus. (wikipedia.org)
  • Johnson's war on poverty has gotten a raw deal in historical memory. (vox.com)
  • Amid the celebrations, there is a caveat: If that attack begins and ends with the stimulus bill, whose biggest anti-poverty measures are temporary, the legislation will offer only momentary improvements. (vox.com)
  • used Braille stimulation and found significant effects of spatial-selective attention on P50 and P100 with left tactile stimuli and on N80 with right tactile stimuli in SI. (frontiersin.org)
  • The Y-maze is usually employed to assess hippocampal-dependent spatial memory by measuring the spontaneous alternation behaviour in a Y-maze. (lu.se)
  • Thirty-one young healthy sleepers (16 men and 15 women, aged 18 to 30 yr, mean+/-SD, 20.5+/-2.4 yr) completed 3 consecutive overnight sessions in a sleep laboratory: one adaptation, one stimulus, and one control night (the latter 2 nights in counterbalanced order). (researchgate.net)
  • When humans make memories, our brains use schemas like these as scaffolding. (elifesciences.org)
  • In the web of neurons where humans store their memory episodes, the activity of a piece of information and its accessibility influence each other in a closed-loop process. (acm.org)
  • In classical conditioning, an animal learns that a previous neutral stimulus [conditioned stimulus (CS)] is associated with the unconditioned stimulus (US). (jneurosci.org)
  • They learn the association between a previously neutral odor (CS) and the US and form a memory about it ( Menzel, 1999 ). (jneurosci.org)
  • Numerous studies have shown that the most vivid autobiographical memories tend to be of emotional events, which are likely to be recalled more often and with more clarity and detail than neutral events. (wikidoc.org)
  • [11] Accordingly, several studies have demonstrated that the presentation of emotionally arousing stimuli (compared to neutral stimuli) results in enhanced memory for central details (details central to the appearance or meaning of the emotional stimuli) and impaired memory for peripheral details. (wikidoc.org)
  • This is evaluated by measuring the activity of the amygdala, a region of the brain associated with memory and emotional attention. (stanford.edu)
  • As they age, adults experience less negative emotion, come to pay less attention to negative than to positive emotional stimuli, and become less likely to remember negative than positive emotional materials. (stanford.edu)
  • Coffee has therefore long fuelled learning, whether it be through the direct stimulation of the brain, increasing attention, improving memory, preventing dementia or providing a social context for debate and work. (blogspot.com)
  • The signals identified in this study are likely critical not only for memory, but also for a number of additional brain functions, such as attention. (technologynetworks.com)
  • Neuropsychological test results indicated that the mild head injured group had mild memory and attention impairments. (sinapse.ac.uk)
  • However, memory for remote events is typically intact, as is attention (also called working memory-patients can repeat lists of items and do simple calculations). (msdmanuals.com)
  • Emotional stimuli, divided attention, and memory. (bvsalud.org)
  • While our actual experiences are quite fluid and not neatly organized, our memories of them are discrete-like "beads on a string," Davachi explains. (nyu.edu)
  • The neurological process that explains why we place some memories closer together in time than we do others is not clear. (nyu.edu)
  • Exposure to risk stimuli , Deprivation of stimuli , and Exposure to protective stimuli . (bvsalud.org)
  • It has been concluded that LTMs undergo a labile phase of memory fixation, called consolidation ( Dudai, 2004 ). (jneurosci.org)
  • Other symptoms (eg, depression, confusion, personality change, difficulty with activities of daily living) may be present depending on the cause of memory loss. (msdmanuals.com)
  • The American Rescue Plan sends $1,400 checks to adults and child dependents and extends bonus federal unemployment benefits through September (continuing the work done in 2020's stimulus bills). (vox.com)
  • As memory loss becomes more severe, people may not remember to pay bills or keep appointments. (msdmanuals.com)
  • stimulus, and one control night (the latter 2 nights in counterbalanced order). (researchgate.net)
  • When memories are recalled, our brains use schemas as step-by-step guides to remember the events in the right order. (elifesciences.org)
  • Using this program, the subject waspresented with seven items of stimuli (CVC) and was to remember what eachstimuli was in the correct order. (artscolumbia.org)
  • Memory is one of the most fundamental functions of the brain, enabling people to learn from experience and remember the past. (technologynetworks.com)
  • There were no significant differences in the amplitude or latency of the P3b evoked by target stimuli or the P3a evoked by novel stimuli. (sinapse.ac.uk)
  • Learning and memory capacities are measured by recording the latency to escape from the white compartment. (lu.se)
  • The thermal, thermo-mechanical, and shape memory properties of thermoplastic polyurethane were studied by means of differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA), and various practical experiments. (mdpi.com)
  • Matthias, John 2013-12-01 00:00:00 This paper examines aspects of neurological memory, rhythm and time within the works Ghost (Jane Grant) and Plasticity (Jane Grant, John Matthias, Nick Ryan and Kin). (deepdyve.com)
  • The compression shape memory performances of the PCL-CA tubular scaffold with different layers were also investigated to simulate and analyze the contraction and expansion of tubular scaffolds. (bvsalud.org)
  • We found that the consolidation of an extinction memory depends on US duration during training and ruled out the possibility that this effect is attributable to differences in satiation after conditioning. (jneurosci.org)
  • We conclude that consolidation of an extinction memory is triggered only when the duration of the US reaches a critical threshold. (jneurosci.org)
  • This demonstrates that memory consolidation cannot be regarded as an isolated process depending solely on training conditions. (jneurosci.org)
  • This memory is termed extinction memory and undergoes consolidation ( Quirk and Mueller, 2008 ). (jneurosci.org)
  • Acute Effects of Alcohol on Encoding and Consolidation of Memory for Emotional Stimuli. (uchicago.edu)
  • 3) Maximum Stimulus Presentation Time = 5 sec. 4) Duration of Correct Answer Display = 5 sec. 5) Completion Criterion = 3 Totally Correct Trials. (artscolumbia.org)
  • And other stimuli could potentially block the pheromone's effects-something we still know little about. (nationalgeographic.com)
  • AbstractA single subject study took place where a male, university student,willingly took part in helping determine what type of stimulus informationis more easily remembered. (artscolumbia.org)
  • In a 2016 study published in the journal Psychology and Psychotherapy , researchers from the University of Liverpool were able to prove that recalling memories associated with positive experiences can help generate positive emotions during a time of stress or worry. (bestlifeonline.com)
  • I have been investigating the neural mechanisms of memory during natural viewing related to revisits of already visited locations (refixations). (lu.se)
  • There's now lots of evidence that coffee improves short-term memory and reaction times by acting on the pre-frontal cortex. (blogspot.com)
  • Analysis of behavioural performance on the three-stimulus 'oddball' task showed no difference in reaction times or error rates between the two groups. (sinapse.ac.uk)
  • This explanation once again highlights the role of working memory limitations in causing the missing-VP effect. (springer.com)
  • So, there is also memory of individual chemical profiles of previously encountered males which blocks the effect of pheromone. (nationalgeographic.com)
  • Our memories are known to be 'altered' versions of reality, and how time is altered has not been well understood," said Lila Davachi, an associate professor in NYU's Department of Psychology and Center for Neural Science and the study's senior author. (nyu.edu)
  • Human memory is stored in the form of a web of neurons. (acm.org)
  • In people with this condition, it takes longer to form new memories (eg, a new neighbor's name, a new computer password) and to learn new complex information and tasks (eg, work procedures, computer programs). (msdmanuals.com)
  • What was astonishing is that after two months the dementia mice had recovered their memories and were the same as the mice who showed no signs of dementia. (blogspot.com)
  • Sometimes family members rather than the patient report the memory loss (typically in an older adults, often one with dementia). (msdmanuals.com)
  • Such concern is based on the common knowledge that the first sign of dementia typically is memory loss. (msdmanuals.com)
  • The neocortex is the largest and most complex part of the brain and has long been considered the ultimate storage site for long-term memories. (technologynetworks.com)
  • Dreams may arise when the brain sorts information into short- and long-term memory. (medicalnewstoday.com)
  • Researchers at New York University have identified the nature of brain activity that allows us to bridge time in our memories. (nyu.edu)
  • Your memory of the previous test-day has been consolidated during the night's sleep, and we believe that today your brain is still deciding what the "message" of the stimulus is. (lu.se)