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Bigidi memory of survival

2022
The subjective experiences of enslavement from the 1600s until 1848 in France’s former colonies are poorly understood today. This circumstance can be traced back to several points of origin. First, the laws and practices governing slavery in the French Caribbean and Indian Ocean from the 17th through the 19th century, arguably, attempted to put ...
Hadley Galbraith   +5 more
openaire   +1 more source

CD4+ memory T cell survival

Current Opinion in Immunology, 2011
Memory CD4+ T cells specific for a given antigen are generated during the primary response from the effector lymphoblast progeny of naïve precursors. How memory CD4+ T cells differentiate from the effector population is not understood but new tools to assess transcription factor and cytokine expression are allowing for a more careful assessment of this
Justin J, Taylor, Marc K, Jenkins
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Adaptive memory: Enhanced location memory after survival processing.

Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2012
Two experiments investigated whether survival processing enhances memory for location. From an adaptive perspective, remembering that food has been located in a particular area, or that potential predators are likely to be found in a given territory, should increase the chances of subsequent survival. Participants were shown pictures of food or animals
James S. Nairne   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Survival processing and picture memory

2023
Effects of survival processing on memory for pictures.
O'Connor, Richard   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

Memory Ordering of Survival Functions

Statistics, 1992
A new partial ordering among life distributions in terms of their memories of aging is introduced. The relationship between this ordering and various existing orderings of life distributions are discussed. For example, it is shown that there is no relationship between memory ordering and failure rate ordering.
N. B. Ebrahimi, Hassan Zahedi
openaire   +1 more source

PHOTOGRAPHY, MEMORY AND SURVIVAL

Literature and Theology, 2000
Death insults and embarrasses us. Barthes drew attention to the way death is figured in the photograph in a way that compels us to engage with it. This article explores, through the work of Christian Boltanski and others, how the photograph—which both captures the uniqueness of the moment and makes its infinitely replaceable—perpetuates a sense of ...
openaire   +1 more source

“The Memory of Beauty” Survives Alzheimer's Disease (but Cannot Help Memory)

Journal of Alzheimer's Disease, 2015
The aesthetic experience, in particular the experience of beauty in the visual arts, should have neural correlates in the human brain. Neuroesthetics is principally implemented by functional studies in normal subjects, but the neuropsychology of the aesthetic experience, that is, the impact of brain damage on the appreciation of works of art, is a ...
Silveri, Maria Caterina   +8 more
openaire   +3 more sources

An Organization for a Highly Survivable Memory

IEEE Transactions on Computers, 1974
A memory organization is considered for which a large number of faults can be tolerated at a low cost in redundancy. The primitive element in the memory is a large-scale integrated (LSI) chip that realizes a section of memory, b bits wide by y words long, together with an address decoder for the y words. The chips (including spares) are connected via a
Goldberg, Jack   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

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