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engram

/en-gram/US // ˈɛn græm //UK // (ˈɛnɡræm) //

酶标仪,酶制剂,酶的作用,酶链球

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a presumed encoding in neural tissue that provides a physical basis for the persistence of memory; a memory trace.

Examples

  • With this technology, which was pioneered by researchers at Stanford almost two decades ago, neuroscientists can artificially activate memory engram cells in lab animals.

  • Today, neuroscientists can manipulate memory engrams by artificially activating their underlying networks and inserting new information.

  • How neurons become part of a memory engram remained a mystery until recently.

  • An engram is stored within a network of connected neurons, and neurons holding the engram can be made to glow so that they are visible through special microscopes.

  • Right after the memory formed, there weren’t huge differences in how the engram cells expressed their genes.

  • Semon's "engram" is formed by all that we experience at one time.

  • Similarly, the engram of the ecphoriated dichotomy is most often that which has been previously most often repeated.

  • Thus the tactile engram will be ecphoriated by the repetition of the original associated irritation.

  • As we have indicated in our comparison, every suggestion which has succeeded leaves a strong trace, or engram, in the brain.

  • These two laws together represent in part a hypothesis (the engram), and in part an observable fact.