Topic
Encoding (memory)
About: Encoding (memory) is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 7547 publications have been published within this topic receiving 120214 citations. The topic is also known as: memory encoding & encoding of memories.
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13 Jun 2007TL;DR: In this article, original data to be stored in a nonvolatile memory are first randomized while preserving the size of the original data, and then the randomized data are retrieved, derandomized and exported without authenticating the requesting entity.
Abstract: Original data to be stored in a nonvolatile memory are first randomized while preserving the size of the original data, In response for a request for the original data, the randomized data are retrieved, derandomized and exported without authenticating the requesting entity. ECC encoding is applied either before or after randomizing; correspondingly, ECC decoding is applied either after or before derandomizing.
114 citations
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TL;DR: Memory impairment in OSA is mild and does not affect all memory processes but, rather, specific aspects, underscoring the need for extensive and specific memory testing in clinical and research settings.
Abstract: Study Objective; To investigate which memory processes are affected by obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). Design: Three separate memory systems were investigated in patients with OSA and normal subjects. Verbal episodic memory was tested after forced encoding, in order to control the level of attention during item presentation; procedural memory was tested using a simplified version of a standard test with an interfering task; lastly, working memory was examined with validated paradigms based on a theoretical model. Setting; Sleep laboratory and outpatient sleep clinic in a French tertiary-care university hospital. Participants: Ninety-five patients with OSA and 95 control subjects matched for age and level of education. Group 1 (54 patients, 54 controls) underwent an extensive battery of tasks evaluating verbal episodic, procedural, and working memory. Group 2 (16 patients, 16 controls) underwent procedural memory tests only, and group 3 (25 patients, 25 controls) working memory tests only. Interventions: N/A. Measurements and Results: Compared with matched controls, patients with OSA exhibited a retrieval deficit of episodic memory but intact maintenance, recognition, and forgetfulness; decreased overall performance in procedural memory, although pattern learning did occur; and impairment of specific working memory capabilities despite normal short-term memory. No consistent correlation was found between OSA severity and memory deficit. The long duration of the test session did not negatively impact the patients' performance. Conclusions: Memory impairment in OSA is mild and does not affect all memory processes but, rather, specific aspects, underscoring the need for extensive and specific memory testing in clinical and research settings.
114 citations
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28 Dec 1993
TL;DR: In this paper, an associative memory utilizes a location addressable memory and lookup table to generate from a key the address in memory storing an associated record, such that the sum of valid index values for symbols of a particular key is a unique value that is used as an address to the memory storing the record associated with that key.
Abstract: To provide fast access times with very large key fields, an associative memory utilizes a location addressable memory and lookup table to generate from a key the address in memory storing an associated record. The lookup tables, stored in memory, are constructed with the aid of arithmetic data compression methods to create a near perfect hashing of the keys. For encoding into the lookup table, keys are divided into a string of symbols. Each valid and invalid symbol is assigned an index value, such that the sum of valid index values for symbols of a particular key is a unique value that is used as an address to the memory storing the record associated with that key, and the sum of keys containing invalid index values point to a location in memory containing similar data. Utilizing the lookup tables set and relational operations maybe carried out that provide a user with a maximum number of key records resulting from a sequence of intersection, union and mask operations.
113 citations
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TL;DR: Encoding and decoding models are widely used in systems, cognitive, and computational neuroscience to make sense of brain-activity data but the interpretation of their results requires care and many models must be tested and inferentially compared for analyses to drive theoretical progress.
113 citations
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TL;DR: Using a continuous recognition task with colored and monochrome gray-scale images of natural scenes at short exposure durations, it is found that color enhances recognition memory by conferring an advantage during encoding and by strengthening the encoding-specificity effect.
Abstract: We offer a framework for understanding how color operates to improve visual memory for images of the natural environment, and we present an extensive data set that quantifies the contribution of color in the encoding and recognition phases. Using a continuous recognition task with colored and monochrome gray-scale images of natural scenes at short exposure durations, we found that color enhances recognition memory by conferring an advantage during encoding and by strengthening the encoding-specificity effect. Furthermore, because the pattern of performance was similar at all exposure durations, and because form and color are processed in different areas of cortex, the results imply that color must be bound as an integral part of the representation at the earliest stages of processing.
113 citations