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1 daily basis, relatively few are committed to memory.
2 lesions suffer profound failures in episodic memory.
3  knockin (APP-KI) mice with impaired spatial memory.
4 eurological function, including learning and memory.
5 infection, a phenomenon called innate immune memory.
6        We referred to this phenomenon as EMT memory.
7 ng a delayed decision task requiring working memory.
8 s efficient cortical activity during working memory.
9 ng a delayed decision task requiring working memory.
10 cise is a powerful modulator of learning and memory.
11 ovide insight into the maladaptive nature of memory.
12 s indispensable for the establishment of EMT memory.
13 ral Ability, Speed/Flexibility, and Learning/Memory.
14 ophagy in neuronal function, plasticity, and memory.
15 o internal representations in visual working memory.
16 ient for the behavioural expression of odour memory.
17 ur understanding of the neural substrates of memory.
18 siological processes, including learning and memory.
19 s considered a neuronal correlate of working memory.
20 o form sleep-dependent and sleep-independent memory.
21 ential for long-term synaptic plasticity and memory.
22  to facilitate associative fear learning and memory.
23 ltifaceted SARS-CoV-2-specific immunological memory.
24 after training did not require sleep to form memories.
25  and are resistant to the extinction of fear memories.
26 ant for stable encoding of specific types of memories.
27 olecular switching systems and storage-class memories.
28 n of water maze, as well as contextual fear, memories.
29 n in the human brain needed to form episodic memories.
30 to describe the neural substrate for storing memories.
31 electric tetragonality logic and nonvolatile memories(1,2).
32 ng high-quality-factor resonators as quantum memories(3,9).
33 directly related elements of the overlapping memories (A and C images) in isolation.
34 yses to measure reactivation of initial pair memories (A items) during overlapping pair (BC) learning
35    By contrast, trisomic mice exhibited poor memory abilities and disordered prefrontal-hippocampal f
36 chanisms necessary to generate immunological memory able to induce long-term protection against disea
37         In a behavioral study, we found that memory accuracy is enhanced selectively for unexpected h
38 encode space at a finer scale following fear memory acquisition.
39                     To assay spatial working memory, all animals performed a reinforced T-maze altern
40 ICANCE STATEMENT The flexibility of episodic memory allows us to remember both the details that diffe
41 m building blocks for magnetic random access memories and magnetic sensors.
42 lidation can weaken maladaptive context-drug memories and reduce the propensity for drug relapse.
43 two tasks: one where attention was guided by memory and another in which attention was explicitly ins
44 cterized by deficits in executive functions, memory and attention.
45  multisensory processes predict higher-order memory and cognition already during childhood, even if s
46 general executive processes, such as working memory and cognitive control, have long been implicated
47 heds light on the pathophysiology of altered memory and cognitive function in BBSOAS.
48 tive tests that may depend on verbal working memory and encoding.
49 cal translation of key mRNAs in learning and memory and expand on the notion of dynamic functional RN
50    We find that contemporaneously developing memory and GC B cells differ in their affinity for antig
51 the CRN to the temporal dynamics of episodic memory and highlight the role of alpha rhythms in reveal
52                                              Memory and Naive B cells are good potential predictors o
53 r to impairment in cognitive domains such as memory and perceptual reasoning, and act as intermediate
54 ng memory subnetwork relates to both working memory and reasoning performance whereas disruption to t
55  imaging unit with a combination of in-built memory and signal processing capability is imperative to
56  a crucial functional substrate for episodic memory and spatial representation.
57  two covert factors: strength of recognition memory and the criterion for deciding what memory streng
58  has previously been attributed to molecular memory and, more specifically, to the maintenance of adh
59 emory, executive function, language/semantic memory, and global composite) using z-scores for neurops
60 eye movement (REM) sleep regulates emotional memory, and persistent REM sleep impairment after cocain
61 ental changes in behaviors such as learning, memory, and social interactions.
62 directed influences compete for selection in memory, and that the balance of this competition-as refl
63 indicate that THC does impair visual working memory, and that this impairment may be related to both
64 resentations has provided deep insights into memory architecture and its neural underpinnings.
65  revealing when and where different types of memories are retrieved.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Our abilit
66                                       Immune memories are stored in the form of 'spacers' which are s
67 ppocampal synaptic plasticity, learning, and memory are impaired in these mutant mice.
68 al systems aimed at testing various sorts of memory are therefore also central.
69 elp buffer stress or the effects of negative memories, as well as extinguish maladaptive behaviors.
70 bal action by selectively promoting specific memories associated with local sleep oscillations.
71 rsal hippocampus (CA1), selectively disrupts memories associated with methamphetamine (METH) days aft
72 ment and in five cognitive domains (episodic memory, attention/working memory, executive function, la
73 n (IgG) antibodies, neutralizing plasma, and memory B and memory T cells that persisted for at least
74  center reaction, limiting the generation of memory B cell and long-lived plasma cell responses.
75 ants with B cells led to greater tissue like memory B cell frequencies.
76 te the presence of concurrent donor-specific memory B cell-derived HLA antibodies (DSA-M) in renal al
77 +) T cells (CD3(+)CD8(+)CD161(+)PD1(+)), and memory B cells (CD3(-)CD19(+)CD20(+)CD24(+)CD27(+)) were
78                                              Memory B cells (MBCs) expressing the transcription facto
79 he generation of long-lived plasma cells and memory B cells and highlight the challenges for successf
80 de evidence that primary FCRL4-bearing human memory B cells are constitutively bound to IgA.
81  expanded upon antigen re-encounter, whereas memory B cells expressed receptors capable of neutralizi
82                                              Memory B cells had reemerged in 2 of 10 (20%) relapses i
83 h-affinity germinal center (GC) B cells into memory B cells versus plasma cells is a major quest of a
84                    Alternatively, subsets of memory B cells were lower in abundance in cirrhotic rela
85 es from ~2,200 IgG-secreting activated human memory B cells, activated ex vivo, demonstrating its ver
86 chemokine receptors were up-regulated in CSF memory B cells.
87 s can perform comparably to the more complex memory-based exemplar models dominant in laboratory sett
88 1] argue that boundary extension (BE), false memory beyond a view, is an artifact of stimulus selecti
89                            These associative memory biases were especially pronounced for stimuli rat
90 ecurrent neural network with long short-term memory (BLSTM) to capture the long-range interaction pat
91 opamine replacement on the prioritization of memories by reward and the time-dependence of this effec
92                            T cell epigenetic memory can persist long-term, contributing to long-lasti
93  Parkinson's disease have focused on overall memory capacity rather than what is versus what isn't re
94 gulatory effects at eight time points during memory CD4(+) T cell activation with high-depth RNA-seq
95 lop a higher frequency of antiviral effector memory CD4(+) T(EM) cells specific to two immunodominant
96 n pancreatic tumors and increases numbers of memory CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, eradicating all detectable
97 R sequencing, to dissect the human naive and memory CD4+ T cell repertoire against the influenza pand
98                                              Memory CD8 T cells provide durable protection against di
99 We demonstrate this by functionally altering memory CD8 T cells using CRISPR/Cas9-mediated targeted g
100 cess in genetic alteration of Ag-experienced memory CD8 T cells.
101                          SARS-CoV-2-specific memory CD8(+) T cells exhibited functional characteristi
102 he transcriptome, phenotype, and function of memory CD8(+) T cells, sharing the same HSV-1 epitope-sp
103  cells can sometimes acquire properties of a memory cell without encountering foreign antigen.
104 g at a defined effector checkpoint to become memory cells.
105  in the tumor-bearing host, and persisted as memory cells.
106 n rodents and humans suggests that long-term memory consolidation can be enhanced by the exploration
107 y proposes a synaptic-level mechanism of how memory consolidation is affected by sensory stimulation
108 ke and active(4), the ability to switch to a memory consolidation mechanism that is not contingent on
109          Thus, we hypothesized that impaired memory consolidation mechanisms in hippocampal-cortical
110 affecting existing oligodendrocytes impaired memory consolidation of water maze, as well as contextua
111 pus and that SETD6 knockdown interferes with memory consolidation, alters gene expression patterns, a
112 tive conditioning needed increased sleep for memory consolidation, but flies starved after training d
113 vidence that glucocorticoid hormones enhance memory consolidation, helping to ensure that emotionally
114 failed to enhance sleep-dependent procedural memory consolidation.
115 e model, only AT FTP significantly predicted memory decline.
116 urthermore, ISRIB treatment reverses spatial memory deficits and ameliorates working memory in old mi
117 e long term effects, including cognitive and memory deficits.
118 -cortical networks could account for spatial memory deficits.
119 ecision of context and visual discrimination memories depend on interactions between the hippocampus
120 uencing and computational modelling to track memory development during Plasmodium infection and treat
121 insic role of Batf3 in regulating CD8 T cell memory development.
122 quently, the mechanism(s) that contribute to memory development.
123  hence this opens avenues for magnetooptical memory devices.
124                                              Memory disruption in mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and
125                                       Strong memories do not destabilize, for instance, although why
126 These data show that reactivation of related memories during new learning leads to dissociable coding
127 opaminergic neuron DAN-i1 can both establish memory during training and acutely terminate learned sea
128                                     Due to a memory effect, changes of NH protection during antibody
129                       This study reveals how memory effects stymied the locomotion of a diversity of
130 presentational change for indirectly related memory elements in hippocampal subfields.
131 ucocorticoid synthesis inhibitor blocked the memory enhancement as well as the potentiated corticoste
132 e response, indicating the dependence of the memory enhancement on glucocorticoid release during the
133 sights into the neural mechanisms underlying memory enhancement, which has value for educational lear
134                                         This memory enhancing effect (behavioral tagging) is caused b
135  domains (episodic memory, attention/working memory, executive function, language/semantic memory, an
136 ring with memory reconsolidation or inducing memory extinction are two approaches for weakening malad
137                             The formation of memory for a novel experience is a critical cognitive ca
138                                 Instead, our memory for a scene may be largely driven by its visual c
139 LE and juv-adol ELE formed lasting long-term memory for an object location memory task, whereas seden
140 as foraging orientation and navigation, time-memory for food sources, sleep, and learning/memory proc
141 ndscape of engram cells over the lifespan of memory formation and recall.
142 on, trafficking, expansion, persistence, and memory formation by strategic selection of substrate cel
143  findings provide a new mechanism for social memory formation, through regulating synaptic receptor t
144  kinase 3beta (GSK3beta) plays a key role in memory formation, yet its role in mood regulation remain
145  tested a hypothesis that sleep protects old memories from being forgotten after new learning.
146 ll as the evolution, of altered awareness of memory function across the preclinical and prodromal sta
147    Incorporating indexing into frameworks of memory function opens new avenues of study and even ther
148 esis plays an important role in learning and memory function throughout life.
149 having unique predictive value for long-term memory function, hippocampal volume and training benefit
150 al attention-predicts the quality of ensuing memory-guided behavior.
151 and mPFC, two regions that are important for memory-guided behaviors, in two tasks: one where attenti
152  indicating that the hippocampus coordinates memory-guided eye movements.
153              Together, our results show that memory-guided identity templates proactively impact perc
154 ' theta state of the brain are important for memory-guided navigation and rely on visual inputs.
155 hereas DG's function in spatial learning and memory has been extensively investigated, its role in re
156 ffects of ablation of the molecular clock on memory have been studied in many systems, little has bee
157 However, the effects of minocycline on human memory have not previously been investigated.
158 the lateral striatum supported both types of memories if they were formed in the same environment, ev
159 f synaptic connectivity is linked to working memory impairment and is specific to repeated exposure t
160 get for the treatment of disorders involving memory impairments.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The dentate gy
161 are two approaches for weakening maladaptive memories in disorders such as addiction and post-traumat
162                         Human cultures store memories in large distributed assemblies composed of ind
163 fferentiated representations for overlapping memories in the dentate gyrus/CA(2,3) and subiculum subf
164                            We studied T cell memory in 42 patients following recovery from COVID-19 (
165 environmental geometry affects human spatial memory in a similar manner to rodent grid-cell activity
166 cers characterizes the acquisition of innate memory in activated NK cells and macrophages.
167 ronal excitability, synaptic plasticity, and memory in adulthood, despite the lack of requirement for
168 mote resurrection of exhausted CD4(+) T-cell memory in chronic infection.
169 or the first time that olfactory associative memory in Drosophila requires signaling by Pigment-dispe
170 ted with lower brain activity during working memory in extensive areas in the default mode network (i
171 n many processes fundamental to learning and memory in health and are implicated in Alzheimer's patho
172 ies and suggests the maintenance of semantic memory in healthy ageing.
173 tial memory deficits and ameliorates working memory in old mice.
174                        Meanwhile, studies of memory in patients with Parkinson's disease have focused
175 velopmental milestones and spatial olfactory memory in Ts1Cje neonates.
176  neuroanatomical substrates of g and working memory include the arcuate fasciculus.
177 sting expectation violation does not enhance memory indiscriminately, but specifically aids the disam
178 y task (during magnetoencephalography) and a memory integration task.
179 mpus are critical for the integration of new memories into stable generalized representations in neoc
180                    This direct conversion to memory is associated with a selective increase in TCR se
181               A powerful feature of adaptive memory is its inherent flexibility.
182 y simple educational manipulation to improve memory, learning, and transfer of theory-rich content.
183 ological processes that facilitate long-term memories (LTM) but also the suppression of inhibitory pr
184            Additionally, SARS-CoV-2-specific memory lymphocytes exhibited characteristics associated
185 regions involved in multisensory and spatial memory mediate the aftereffect following both trial-wise
186 proposed neural substrate of the integrative memory model supporting the core and attribution functio
187 th higher density of color names are held in memory more accurately.
188               For long-running jobs or large memory needs we provide detailed guidance on high-perfor
189 erolateral EC and the anterior-temporal (AT) memory network appears to drive higher tau deposition in
190 tion in AT than in the posterior-medial (PM) memory network.
191 st memristor for applications in ultra-dense memory, neuromorphic computing and radio-frequency commu
192 ark is possible in networks of noisy, finite-memory neurons, and shows that Hick's law may be a sympt
193 ophila dopaminergic neurons (DANs) reinforce memories of unique valence and provide state-dependent m
194                Concurrently, the concept of "memory of chirality" has been proven as a powerful tool
195                  CD8(+) T cell immunological memory of past antigen exposure can confer long-lived pr
196 aracteristics of PPN such as pain threshold, memory of prior injury, and pain sensitization/desensiti
197 nally acquired histone methylation acts as a memory of prior transcription.
198 mpaired the consolidation of fear extinction memory of rats trained in contextual fear conditioning.
199 n conductance response (SCR) and declarative memory of stimulus-outcome contingencies during a differ
200                     The resulting short-term memory of the membrane potential allows to generate pers
201                         Materials possessing memory of thermal history hold promise for applications
202                                              Memory-one strategies are a set of Iterated Prisoner's D
203 omplexity informs our understanding of false memories or of the development of recollection and famil
204     Here we used Magnetoencephalography in a memory paradigm assessing correct rejection (CR) of lure
205 entate gyrus (DG) is important for learning, memory, pattern separation, and spatial navigation, and
206 task is sensitive to subtle deterioration in memory performance across ageing.
207 ons, and disrupted the relationships between memory performance and hippocampal connectivity.
208  voluntary and involuntary factors influence memory performance but do so in distinct ways.
209                         We show that working memory performance depends on the strength of functional
210                    TSD significantly reduced memory performance in a scene recognition task, impaired
211 ep duration was positively related to source memory performance.
212 ease in signal-to-noise ratio during working memory periods as well as an enhancement of the neurons'
213  studying prototypical telluride nonvolatile-memory, "phase-change" materials (PCMs), and related cha
214              Moreover, based on the enhanced memory phenotype of Tiam1 KO mice, Tiam1 may be a potent
215 lasting, pp65-specific T cells with effector memory phenotype were significantly higher in Triplex th
216                 Here, a novel magnetic shape memory polymer composite is reported to achieve this.
217 y distinct Blimp1(lo)Id3(hi) tissue-resident memory population that subsequently accumulated at later
218 ntract to a stable activated tissue-resident memory population.
219 ion to contribute to a substantially reduced memory population.
220                              To assess which memories predicted drinking, real-world behavior was ass
221  while down-weighting retrieval of erroneous memory predictions to promote an updated representation
222 elevant biological signals with learning and memory processes to regulate feeding.
223 recent decades as general neuromodulators of memory processes, sex steroid hormones such as the poten
224 memory for food sources, sleep, and learning/memory processes.
225  significance of the EC as a major player in memory processing, along with other associated structure
226  system in synaptic plasticity and emotional memory processing.
227 he wrong breadcrumb trail of transcriptional memory provides a framework for understanding how hetero
228 elated events in subfield CA(1) Furthermore, memory reactivation and subiculum representation predict
229                                We found that memory reactivation during learning promoted formation o
230            Hence, targeted interference with memory reconsolidation can weaken maladaptive context-dr
231                             Interfering with memory reconsolidation or inducing memory extinction are
232                 We hypothesized that cocaine-memory reconsolidation requires cannabinoid type 1 recep
233 ings demonstrate that SETD6 is necessary for memory-related nuclear factor-kappaB RELA methylation at
234 eural dynamics, sub-serving auditory working memory, remains largely unexplored.
235 heir current environment and their long-term memory representations.
236                   Long-lasting, consolidated memories require not only positive biological processes
237  that people strategically allocated working memory resources by ignoring information that appeared i
238 ogeneous magnitude of CD4(+) T cell-mediated memory responses was observed in regard to lymphoblast e
239          Filamentary resistive random access memory (RRAM) suffers from stochastic switching due to t
240                                              Memory stability is essential for animal survival when e
241 ocampal complex (HC) is central to long-term memory storage and retrieval as well as spatial navigati
242 ions between the hippocampus (HPC) and other memory storage networks.
243 n memory and the criterion for deciding what memory strength is sufficient for identification.
244 d is asymmetrical: disruption to the working memory subnetwork relates to both working memory and rea
245 iction emphasize the importance of different memory systems for understanding maladaptive use, clinic
246  olfactory, thermosensory, hygrosensory, and memory systems in the fly Drosophila melanogaster.
247 of memory T cells and screening of naive and memory T cell libraries, combined with T cell cloning an
248 differentiation programs in the human CD8(+) memory T cell pool, with potentially broad implications
249  T(RM) cells align closely with conventional memory T cell populations, bearing little resemblance to
250         Here, we used ex vivo stimulation of memory T cells and screening of naive and memory T cell
251                                              Memory T cells are unable to differentiate into the Th2
252                         The fact that CD8(+) memory T cells can have features of both naive and effec
253 doptive transfer studies indicate that these memory T cells develop in a cell-intrinsic manner follow
254 s associated with potent antiviral function: memory T cells secreted cytokines and expanded upon anti
255 odies, neutralizing plasma, and memory B and memory T cells that persisted for at least 3 months.
256          Human skin contains a population of memory T cells that supports tissue homeostasis and prov
257  causal variants, implicating CD4 + effector memory T cells, as well as monocytes, B cells and stroma
258 on depletion of circulating and perivascular memory T cells, this brain signature was enriched and th
259 okine release that resembled those of normal memory T cells.
260                                        Total memory T-cell responses were measured after anti-CD3 or
261 companied by increased frequency of effector memory T-cells.
262 ocampal-prefrontal theta coupling: a spatial memory task (during magnetoencephalography) and a memory
263       We designed a flexible spatial working memory task that required rats to navigate - after distr
264 ting long-term memory for an object location memory task, whereas sedentary and adol ELE mice did not
265 ocampal function was assessed using a verbal memory task.
266 ngle-trial EEG data from a Sternberg working memory task.
267 nd performance on easy vs. difficult working memory tasks with emotional stimuli contributes to discr
268          Following two hippocampus-dependent memory tasks, DSW occurrence rates, ripple frequencies,
269 ells to the T effector (TEFF), T circulating memory (TCIRCM), and TRM pools by lineage-tracing and si
270  to empower transformative, energy-efficient memory technology.
271 th AUD at baseline and for 4 weeks following memory tests.
272 n contrast, relative frequencies of CXCR5(-) memory Th cells as well as regulatory T and B cells were
273                        Selectively targeting memory Th17 cells may be a viable therapeutic approach i
274 ta suggest that age-related increases in the memory Th17 compartment predispose aged mice toward the
275 possible without storing images of shapes in memory that are accessible to more than one sensory moda
276 ometric correspondence between g and working memory - the ability to maintain and control mental info
277 experience and embed critical cue-associated memory traces that promote cocaine relapse.
278 al mechanism for the restructuring of neural memory traces.
279 mation exchange between the HPC and mPFC for memory transfer/consolidation, is not known.
280 as associated with a higher proliferation of memory Tregs.
281                              Tissue-resident memory (Trm) CD8(+) T cells mediate protective immunity
282 hich people incorporate their trial-to-trial memory uncertainty with potential rewards and prior beli
283 stimate of a stimulus color and a measure of memory uncertainty, obtained through a rewarded decision
284 S is presented), and how fear and extinction memory undergo consolidation one day after the original
285  an effective, sensitive method of assessing memory updating in rodents.
286 , these results demonstrate that hippocampal memory updating is impaired with aging and establish tha
287 -cell variation and over 50% of CD8+ central memory variation.
288              A first MI-induced bone marrow "memory" via a circulating signal, reducing hematopoietic
289                          In contrast, visual memory was worse with greater bilateral inferomedial hip
290 osphorus (BP) is exploited to achieve visual memory, wavelength-selective multibit programming, and e
291 day depend on their ability to induce B cell memory, we have not yet succeeded in developing vaccines
292 ting the importance of sleep in learning and memory, we tested a hypothesis that sleep protects old m
293 d with potentiated recall of fear extinction memory when tested 24 hours after extinction training.
294 ) are biased to differentiate highly similar memories, whereas CA(1) may integrate related events by
295        The fragile and jammed states exhibit memory, while the elastic and pinning dominated regimes
296 thstanding, it is likely that future DBS for memory will employ closed-loop, nuanced approaches that
297 s appear able to encode stimuli into working memory with little, if any, conscious experience of them
298  timescales, and areas important for working memory (WM) contain neurons capable of integrating infor
299                       Theoretically, working memory (WM) representations are encoded by population ac
300 aintenance of sensory information in working memory (WM).

 
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