The Historian Who Lost Her Memory of a Hijacking ...Middle East

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The Historian Who Lost Her Memory of a Hijacking
Memory, more than any of the other cognitive processes, is a mystery. There is, to start, no single thing, structure, or process that is memory. Short-term memory seems to comprise multiple forms: extremely short-term sense memories, some auditory and some visual and spatial, regulated by some kind of central attention or executive function. Long-term memories are now usually categorized as “declarative”—so-called conscious memory, which includes both semantic memory (the recall of facts and figures, for example) and episodic memory (the recollection of scenes, images, events, experiences)—as well as procedural, unconscious memories: how to write the alphabet; how to play a scale on the viol

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