memory prosthesis

memory prosthesis
(mem.uh.ree praws.THEE.sus; TH as in thin)
n.
A device that helps or enables a person to remember things.
Example Citation:
Sunil Vemuri, a graduate student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Media Lab, is hoping to fill in the holes left by our sometimes fickle minds. How? "Our focus," he says, "is on audio recording everything in our lives."
Vemuri has spent much of the last year and a half strapped to a microphone and PDA, which picks up every word he utters to friends, colleagues and family and beams the information wirelessly to a server. Voice-recognition software converts the spoken word into text and delivers it to his laptop, where it is cataloged along with hourly weather reports, screen grabs, Internet news sites, his e-mail, every item on his daily calendar and — via a Global Positioning System chip in his PDA — his whereabouts in the lab building. Later, when Vemuri is trying to remember something, he finds the passage in any number of ways. He might do a keyword search or look up a particular date. ...
"Some people work in environments where they're given a lot of information, a lot of to-do lists," he says. "But because of the hectic nature of their jobs, they have an inability to write down notes in a timely fashion. A memory prosthesis would allow them to record it and then, later on, have the ability to retrieve it."
— Anna Kuchment, "Truly Total Recall," Newsweek, June 30, 2003
Earliest Citation:
Almost everything you do today will be forgotten in just a few weeks. The ability to retrieve a memory decays exponentially, and after only a month more than 85 per cent of our experiences will have slipped beyond reach, unless boosted by artificial aids such as diaries and photographs.
Given that our memories are our identities, this is a frightening rate of loss. But what if a machine could record our lives, keeping nearly everything that happened accessible to us? It is likely that computer technology and video cameras will continue to get cheaper over the next decade, so why not build electronic memory aids that simply record every waking moment?
At Rank Xerox's EuroParc laboratory in Cambridge, a team of 30 computer scientists, psychologists and sociologists have been working on an electronic memory prosthesis.
— John McCrone, "Don't forget your memory aide," New Scientist, February 5, 1995
Also:
If memory loss were physical, like the loss of an arm or leg, doctors might consider replacing the part that didn't work with a sort of memory prosthesis.
— Deborah Wise, "Banks for the...er...memory," The Guardian, May 8, 1992
Notes:
Mark Worden told me about this phrase.
Related Words: Categories:

New words. 2013.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • memory glasses — n. Eyeglasses that include a small video camera attached to a wearable computer that has been programmed to recognize certain faces and objects and then tell the user (such as an Alzheimer s sufferer) what they are seeing. Example Citation:… …   New words

  • Prosthesis — For other uses, see Prosthesis (disambiguation). Not to be confused with Orthotic. A man with two prosthetic arms playing table football …   Wikipedia

  • Visual prosthesis — For the non functional prosthesis or glass eye see Ocular prosthesis and Craniofacial prosthesis. A visual prosthesis, often referred to as a bionic eye, is an experimental visual device intended to restore functional vision in those suffering… …   Wikipedia

  • List of psychology topics — This page aims to list all topics related to psychology. This is so that those interested in the subject can monitor changes to the pages by clicking on Related changes in the sidebar. It is also to see the gaps in Wikipedia s coverage of the… …   Wikipedia

  • senior moment — (SEEN.yur moh.munt) n. A momentary lapse in memory, particularly one experienced by a senior citizen. Example Citations: As baby boomers age, memory loss looms large in America. This being the land of marketing opportunity, that means we ll be… …   New words

  • Aging and Death — activationist active aging age heaping aging ear andrologist andropause beanpole family boomeritis …   New words

  • Gadgets and Appliances — annotated reality antigriddle Apple picking appliance garage barfogenesis battery boutique beeper sitter …   New words

  • aging ear — n. Age induced hearing loss, particularly of high pitched sounds. Example Citations: In that old battle of the wills between young people and their keepers, the young have found a new weapon that could change the balance of power on the cellphone …   New words

  • retrogenesis — (ret.troh.JEN.uh.sis) n. The loss of mental abilities in old age in the opposite order in which they are gained in childhood, especially as exhibited by Alzheimer s patients. Example Citation: Reisberg and others say that retrogenesis is more… …   New words

  • Science (General) — Science General altmetrics anecdata black hole collaboratory cosmeceutical decimal dust directed sound dozenalist …   New words

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”