Lack of memory about events occurring during a particular period of time Several varieties are relevant: Anterograde amnesia - inability to remember eventsbeginning with the onset of the injury; essentially, severly decreased ability to learn Retrograde amnesia - loss of memory for events preceding the injury Post-traumatic amnesia (PTA) the period of anterograde amnesia following a head injury Unable to store new information
loss of memory syndrome, characterised by intact LTS and preserved procedural memory and which is caused by damage to one of two specific brain regions, the temporal lobes or the diencephalon
Lack of memory about events occurring during a particular period of time See also: anterograde amnesia, retrograde amnesia, post-traumatic amnesia [Click Here to Return to List]
Choose 1 of the defending Pokémon's attacks The defending Pokémon cannot use that attack next turn Pokémon with this attack: Poliwhirl L28, Wooper L18, Misty's Poliwag
Loss of memory Usually only a partial loss such as for a period of time or biographical information Analysis See Psychoanalysis Anxiety The physiological and psychological reaction to an expected danger, whether real or imagined
-The inability to recall significant events or other important information which is too extreme to be explained by ordinary forgetfulness; the absence of memory;; usually experienced in DID to some extent between certain identities
Forgetfulness; also, a defect of speech, from cerebral disease, in which the patient substitutes wrong words or names in the place of those he wishes to employ
If someone is suffering from amnesia, they have lost their memory. the medical condition of not being able to remember anything (, probably from amnestia; AMNESTY). Loss of memory as a result of brain injury or deterioration, shock, fatigue, senility, drug use, alcoholism, anesthesia, illness, or neurotic reaction. Amnesia may be anterograde (in which events following the causative trauma or disease are forgotten) or retrograde (in which events preceding the trauma or disease are forgotten). It can often be traced to a severe emotional shock, in which case personal memories (e.g., identity) rather than less-personal material (e.g., language skills) are affected. Such amnesia seems to represent an escape from disturbing memories, and is thus an example of repression; these memories can generally be recovered through psychotherapy or after the amnesiac state has ended. Amnesia may occasionally last for weeks, months, or even years, a condition known as fugue. See also hypnosis
Someone who is amnesiac has lost their memory. She was taken to hospital, apparently amnesiac and shocked. An amnesiac is someone who is amnesiac. Even profound amnesiacs can usually recall how to perform daily activities
the difficulty in purposefully forming new memories after an injury to memory function without any effect on the ability to retrieve memories stored prior to the injury; one meaning of antero- is "before"; people with anterograde amnesia forget new information before they even have a chance to store it
A memory disorder characterized by an inability to retrieve old long-term memories, generally for a specific period of time extending back from the beginning of the disorder (p 259)
amnesia about particular events that is very convenient for the person who cannot remember; "why do politicians always develop selective amnesia when questioned about their transgressions?
memory disorder seen in middle aged and elderly persons; characterized by an episode of amnesia and bewilderment that lasts for several hours; person is otherwise alert and intellectually active
amnésia
Расстановка переносов
am·ne·sia
Турецкое произношение
ämnijı
Произношение
/amˈnēᴢʜə/ /æmˈniːʒə/
Этимология
() From modified Latin amnesia, from Ancient Greek ἀμνησία (“forgetfulness”).