Web   

  Home | Submit Article   




Partner sites

Submit articles
Articles Collection
Articles Folder
Articles Network
Network of Articles
Articles Publisher
Free Articles
Collection of articles
Site of articles
Business Articles
Read Articles
Some Articles
Rent Articles
Articles Cabinet
Articles Room
Cool Articles
Articles Achieve
Source Of Articles

Free Advertising Blog
Webmaster Feeds
Cell Phone Resources
Free Lyrics
Cell phone feeds
Online Business
Inspirational Quotes

> Science :: Memory Research Misses The Obvious  
The search to reveal a mystery.

Research laboratories around the world sought the location of human memory. The research had followed diverse leads. One clue related to the branched inputs of nerve cells, called dendrites. Branch growth was assisted by a protein called cypin. Some memory disabilities were related to deficits in cypin. So, one possibility was that nerve cells grew new branches to store memory. New branches could represent added memory. But, human memory was immense. People were reported to be able to recognize, with 99.5% accuracy, any one of 2,500 images shown to them at one second intervals. Each of those images contained millions of pixels of specific information. When the size and scale of human memory was considered, the idea of branches, however microscopic, growing to add memories sounded perilously cancerous.

More hints.

LTP was another possibility. High frequency stimulation of the dendrites of a neuron were known to improve the sensitivity of the synaptic nerve junctions. Such activity was seen to be "remembered" by the cell through greater sensitivity at specific inputs. Neurochemicals at the synaptic junctions were also known to increase such sensitivity. But, while the process enhanced memory, LTP failed to offer a global hypothesis about how memory could be stored.

Without answers.

The hippocampus was also mentioned in connection with memory research. Damage to this organ, a component of a region of the brain called the limbic system, was known to cause patients to forget ongoing events within a few seconds. But, incidents from childhood and early adult life were still remembered. Memory had faded from a couple of years prior to the event that caused damage to the hippocampus. Older memories were still retained by the patient even without the hippocampus. Evidently, the organ did not store such memories. It could play a role, but the actual storage of memory remained enigmatic. In the end, all science did know was that memory resided all over the system and that one particular organ helped the formation of memories.

Combinatorial coding.

Yet, the answer to the memory enigma had been staring them in the face for years. That happened, when science acknowledged the use of combinatorial coding by nerve cells in the olfactory system. Combinatorial coding sounded confusing and complex. But, in the context of nerve cells, combinatorial coding only meant that a nerve cell recognized combinations. If a nerve cell had dendritic inputs, identified as A, B, C and so on to Z, it could then fire, when it received inputs at ABD, ABP, or XYZ. It recognized those combinations. ABD, ABP, or XYZ. The cell could identify ABD from ABP. Subtle differences. Such codes were extensively used by nature. The four "letters" in the genetic code – A, C, G and T – were used in combinations for the creation of a nearly infinite number of genetic sequences.

Highly developed skill.

It was combinatorial coding, which enabled nerve cells of reptilian nosebrains to recognize smells and make crucial life decisions since the beginnings of history. Such sensory power had been developed in animals to a remarkable degree. Research showed that dogs could register the parameters of a smell and then pick it out from millions of competing smells. The animals could detect a human scent on a glass slide that had been lightly fingerprinted and left outdoors for as much as two weeks. They could quickly sniff a few footprints of a person and determine accurately which way the person was walking. The animal's nose could detect the relative odor strength difference between footprints only a few feet apart, to determine the direction of a trail. Recording and recognizing ABD and DEF enabled animals to record and recall a single smell to differentiate it from millions of other smells. Inherited memories of millions of smells decided whether food was edible, or inedible, or whether a spoor was life threatening. The system had both newly recorded and inherited memories, which enabled them to recognize smells in the environment.

Inherited and acquired memories.

While such remarkable odor recognition skills were known for ages, it was only in the late nineties that science discovered combinatorial coding. A Nobel Prize was awarded for the discovery of the use combinatorial coding by the olfactory system in 2004. The olfactory system used the coding to enable a relatively small number of olfactory receptors to recognize different odors. Science discovered that particular combinations could fire to trigger recognition. In the experiment scientists reported that even slight changes in chemical structure activated different combinations of receptors. Thus, octanol smelled like oranges, but the similar compound octanoic acid smelled like sweat. We remembered the smell of oranges. Even the smell of sweat. Which meant that the system remembered those combinations. But science failed to recognize the true significance of combinatorial coding when they searched for the location of human memory. Millions of combinations were possible for the nerve cell with inputs from A to Z. But nerve cells had thousands of inputs. If nerve cells remembered combinations, then that could be the location of a galactic nervous system memory.

Global applications.

Combinatorial coding could provide immense intelligence to the nervous system. The wonder of nature was the enormous scale, scope and sensitivity of its reporting systems. The mind had this vast army of scouts, reporting back on millions of tiny sensations - the heat of sun and the hardness of rock. Pain on the skin too was a report. When their impulses were received in the cortex, you felt pain. In the earlier example, with combinatorial coding, a cell could fire for ABD and be inhibited for ABP. If the pain reporting nerve cell recognized inputs from its neighbours, it could also respond to neighbouring pain and fire to report sympathetic pain. It could respond to touch and inhibit its own sympathetic pain message. The cell could respond to context.

Pattern recognition.

Nerve cells didn't receive just a few inputs. They received thousands. So, pain could be sensitive to context. Inherited memories in combinatorial codes could enable the system to recognize and respond to patterns in context. Combinatorial coding could explain the mind as a pattern recognition engine. But science worked on the assumption that the neurons in the brain did not recognize, but did computations. The search for a mathematical formula which could simulate the computations of the mind goes on. But, if you assumed pattern recognition, you just stepped out of the mathematical maze. Unfortunately, the recognition of patterns was too formidable a task for computers. The diagnosis of diseases was a typical pattern recognition problem.

The pattern recognition difficulty.

The obstacle was that many shared symptoms were presented by different diseases. Pain, or fever were present for many diseases. Each symptom pointed to several diseases. In the customary search, the first selected disease with the first presented symptom could lack the second symptom. So the back and forth searches followed an exponentially expanding trajectory as the database increased in size. That made the process absurdly long drawn – theoretically, even years, when searching extensive databases. In the light of such an impregnable problem, science did not evaluate pattern recognition as a practical process for the nervous system.

An instant pattern recognition process.

There is an Intuitive Algorithm (IA), which follows a logical process to achieve real time pattern recognition. IA was unique. In a feat never achieved by computers before, IA could almost instantly diagnose diseases. IA used elimination to narrow down possibilities to reach the correct answer. In essence, IA did not calculate, but used elimination to recognize patterns. IA acted with the speed of a simple recalculation on a spreadsheet, to recognize a disease, identify a case law or diagnose the problems of a complex machine. It did this holistically and almost instantly, through simple, logical steps. IA proved that holistic, instant, real time pattern recognition was practical. IA provided a clue to the secret of intuition. The website intuition.co.in and the book explain IA in detail.

Seamless pattern recognition.

The mind was a recognition machine, which instantly recognized the context of its ever changing environment. The system triggered feelings when particular classes of events were recognized. The process was achieved by inherited nerve cell memories accumulated across millions of years. The memories enabled the mind to recognize events. Similar inherited memories in nerve cells enabled the mind to trigger feelings, when events were recognized. And further cell memories caused feelings to trigger actions. Actions were sequences of muscle movements. Even drive sequences could be remembered by nerve cells. That was how we were driven. So the circuit closed. Half a second for a 100 billion nerve cells to use context to eliminate irrelevance and deliver motor output. The time between the shadow and the scream. So, from input to output, the mind was a seamless pattern recognition machine.

Intuition and memory.

Walter Freeman the famous neurobiologist defined the critical difficulty for science in understanding the mind. “The cognitive guys think it's just impossible to keep throwing everything you've got into the computation every time. But, that is exactly what the brain does. Consciousness is about bringing your entire history to bear on your next step, your next breath, your next moment.” The mind was holistic. It evaluated all its knowledge for the next activity. However large its database, the logic of IA could yield instant pattern recognition. Since that logic was robust and practical, intuition could also be such an instant pattern recognition process. Intuition could then power the mind to instantly recognize an infinite variety of objects and events to trigger motor responses. Each living moment, it could evaluate the context of a dynamic multi-sensory world and its own vast memories. Those memories could be stored in the combinatorial codes of nerve cells. The Nobel Prize should have been awarded not for the discovery of combinatorial coding, but for the discovery of human memory.


Author Info:

 

Recent Submitted articles
Suggestions on Website Usability

Website Usability is more than just placing a navigation bar in the right spot and allowing users to search the site. It is an intricate art that not everybody can easily implement. This tip aims to identify some of the key factors that come into play when designing a usable and functional website[ Read Article]

Weaving new techniques for Business Growth

In todays day and age, it’s complete lunacy for businesses to ignore the importance of eMarketing and how it can ultimately benefit their bottom line. Already it’s now 2007 and eMarketing is in full swing, yet it seems there are a lot of organisations that still don’t want to know about it. This b[ Read Article]

Building your Brand Interactively

Welcome to the world of touch screens, mobile phones and online shopping. It seems interacting with businesses via technology is becoming increasingly popular each year and the horizon indicates that this isn’t going to change. Interactive marketing is undoubtedly the future of advertising and is [ Read Article]

E-Commerce in a Nutshell

What is the use of paying hundreds of dollars per week on rent just to sell a few products through a storefront when you can sell everything easily and efficiently online? That is the question a lot of potential small business owners are asking themselves whilst they piece together the intricate d[ Read Article]

Free Web Hosting

Free web hosting is something that appeals to many people. Though it is obviously not right for everyone, free web hosting is suitable for a lot of up and coming web entrepreneurs. Because it is free, there is very little risk when going in with a free web hosting company. The only thing you risk [ Read Article]

Cost Effective Web Hosting Options

For those folks that need some form of web hosting, but they aren’t looking to break the bank in order to get everything, there are some options. You don’t have to be a millionaire to start a website and web hosting doesn’t cost an arm and a leg. If you do some research and look over the various o[ Read Article]

Options in Web Hosting

There are many different options in web hosting that can appeal to the new website owner. Today’s internet offers quite a buyer’s market when it comes to web server hosting. Because of the heavy competition and the many different types of service available, great service is usually readily availabl[ Read Article]

Reseller Hosting

Reseller hosting is an interesting type of web hosting that allows people the ability to use his or her own hard drive space to host websites for other people. Reseller hosting services rarely stand on their own. Usually, they are simply added features from companies that offer other web based ser[ Read Article]

VPS

Virtual private servers, or VPS, are a great way to take one single server computer and let them run many multiple servers. Each of these VPS controlled machines has the ability to run its own operating system and can be full functional. What makes these even better is that each server can be reboo[ Read Article]

Dedicated Servers

Dedicated servers are the most efficient way to host a website on the internet. With dedicated server hosting, webmasters do not have to share their server space with anyone else. The best thing about using a dedicated server is that you have total control and freedom over the things that you do wi[ Read Article]

Post tsunami: Phi Phi revisited two years on

How has the famous Phi Phi island in Thailand recovered from the Tsunami? Thailand based travel writer Andy Burrows went back 18 months later and discovered an undeveloped paradise, much better than it was before. Although living in Thailand for some time, I finally only got to Phi Phi island t[ Read Article]

Hitting the road safely when backpacking across the United Kingdom

An excellent road and rail network and a highly eclectic selection of landscapes and scenery combine with good accommodation infrastructure to provide idyllic conditions for pursuing a nomadic lifestyle. The Youth Hostel Association (YHA) of England and Wales is the most established organisatio[ Read Article]

An easier and cheaper way to book Luton airport parking

When you book airport parking at Luton, you will have three options to consider. You can choose the self park, block park or the meet and greet option. All of the options are simple at Luton as there is only one terminal, ensuring you don’t end up booking a park space in an inappropriate location.[ Read Article]

Safety for outdoor sports and adventure holidays in the UK

Now UK residents and overseas visitors can take advantage of the geographical, topographical, climatic and social variations throughout England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland with peace of mind. For adventurers, these differences mean a vast range of outdoor activities. With everything from[ Read Article]

Savings all the way from the departure gate

Holidaymakers these days almost instinctively head straight for the computer for a cut-price trip away, in the same way we would have automatically gone to the travel agent a decade ago. Flights and hotels are the main criteria to arrange for the perfect getaway, but it is also becoming increasingly[ Read Article]

Safety and comfort before you fly

Making it to the airport for a departure time in the middle of the afternoon is fairly easy, especially for those lucky enough to live in the vicinity of a major airport. But what if your flight is early in the morning? Getting to check-in 2 hours before takeoff usually means a very early start, w[ Read Article]

Great daytrips from Orlando - USA

Orlando’s most popular attraction has to be the Walt Disney World Resort, with famous attractions such as the Magic Kingdom, Typhoon Lagoon, Epcot, Animal Kingdom and Blizzard Beach. Universal Orlando Resort and SeaWorld Orlando are also some of the area’s biggest attractions. SeaWorld is a th[ Read Article]

Great daytrips from Paphos - Cyprus

Paphos, a UNESCO World Heritage site, is a wonderful destination; but there is more to the island of Cyprus to be discovered while based in the capital town. From historic sites to beautiful harbours with castles and mountains in between, taking a daytrip from Paphos is the best way to enjoy the s[ Read Article]

A 700 year story – the moated city of Chiang Mai

Chiang Mai, the capital city of the Province of Chiang Mai, is steeped in history. From its foundation the city has enjoyed both successful and turbulent times. The creation of this moated city can be traced back to the Lanna (million rice fields) Kingdom. A major tourist attraction, lying to [ Read Article]

Parking your car at Exeter Airport

Exeter International Airport (EXT) operates from one comprehensive terminal which provides ten check-in desks, four gates and two luggage claim belts. During the past decade I had to catch numerous of flights from Exeter airport. As a business man I use the facility frequently mainly for busine[ Read Article]

Parking at Glasgow Airport (GLA)

Glasgow airport is positioned eight miles from the city’s downtown area, and the facility handles more than seven million passengers annually. More than 80 worldwide destinations are served by 40 national and international carriers flying out of Glasgow. I can not recall how many times I used t[ Read Article]

Parking at Leeds-Bradford Airport

The Leeds-Bradford Airport (LBA) is positioned approximately 8 miles (13kms) northwest of Leeds and about 7 miles (11kms) north of Bradford. The facility operates direct services all over Great Britain and Europe as well as linking long-haul flights through Paris, Amsterdam and London Heathrow. Le[ Read Article]

Parking at Durham-Tees Valley Airport

By now, after three years of regular travelling out of the Durham airport, I can say I am an experienced (business) flier. Everybody will know that arriving by private car is the most relaxed way of travelling. An important factor is that you should know before you arrive where you want to park an[ Read Article]

Parking at East Midlands Airport

The East Midlands Airport (EMA) is located in central England, 13 miles (21kms) southwest of Nottingham, 11 miles (18kms) southeast of Derby and 19 miles (30.5kms) northwest of Leicester. I’ve been catching business-related flights out of East Midlands airport for years now. Since I first comm[ Read Article]

Tips for cheap parking at Edinburgh Airport

Edinburgh International Airport (EDI) is Scotland’s main air hub and is located just eight miles (13kms) west of the city. There is one comprehensive terminal in the airport with arrivals positioned on the ground floor and departures and the majority of the outlets and eateries situated on the fir[ Read Article]

Nanotechnology – Just What the Doctor Orders!

What if you were terminally ill and your doctor informed you that the venom from a snail could save your life? What if the technology was available to produce a non-addictive painkiller that was thousands of times more potent than any morphine based product available today? What if nanotechnolo[ Read Article]

Nanotechnology and the Emphatic Computer

by Tatiana Velitchkov © 2007 People show their emotions in many diverse and specialized ways, some of which a computer can be programmed to detect. By employing nanotechnology, a camera and image analysis software, some computers are able to observe a user's body language and, with proper progra[ Read Article]

Nanotechnology, Genetic Engineering & Robotics – Doomsday or Miracle?

by Tatiana Velitchkov © 2007 Advances in nanotechnology have proven that incredible progress is not only possible today and in the future, it is pretty well inevitable. Fantastic advances in nanotechnologic medical research have resulted in life saving techniques that were unheard of even a deca[ Read Article]

Accept Credit Cards Online Without a Merchant Account

There are two major ways to accept credit cards on your website. The first and most expensive is to have your own merchant account. Not only is this option expensive, it also requires extensive credit checks, lots of paperwork, and usually takes days or weeks before you get approved. Fortunately, [ Read Article]

Dont Get Ripped Off Getting A Merchant Account

Far too many people get ripped off when setting up a merchant account for their online business. The biggest reason is that they don't understand their options and are intimidated by the whole process. Now, armed with the proper knowledge, you don't need to become a victim of this process. You may[ Read Article]


Articles feed

Webmaster, SEO and Web Development Forums - DevHunters.com l ...
Site Name: Webmasters, Ltd Site URL: Webmasters, Ltd - Webmaster, Web Development and SEO Forums - Index Description: Webmaster forums providing web.


WEBMASTER PEMULA | Iklan Baris Gratis & Forum Jual Beli | Pasang ...
BELAJAR JADI WEBMASTER HANDAL WEBMASTER PEMULA! BELAJAR DARI NOL HINGGA PROFESIONAL! BAHKAN HINGGA JADI JUTAWAN! LEARNING BY DOING SEKALIGUS.


The Role of a Webmaster in Your Internet Business - Ad-Matrix
A webmaster is one of the most important person in your Internet business. This person should be one who is reliable, and can work quickly. An agile mind with e.


Lee Stranahan: Why Are Gay Marriage Advocates Not Defending Polyamory?
Why Are Gay Marriage Advocates Not Defending Polyamory? - The Huffington Post.


The Economic “Stimulus” by Thomas Sowell on National Review Online
Two centuries ago, when there were plans to create a huge fund of money to pay off Britain’s national debt, the great classical economist David Ricardo objected on grounds that — no matter what the money was said to be for — politicians ...


What Good Can Come of This? by Mona Charen on National Review Online
It was lost amid the news of Israel’s counterattack on Hamas in the past few days, but Hamas’ leadership passed several new laws for Gaza in December. They’ve adopted the Sharia criminal code, which legalizes a number of medieval ...


spam
Are You Looking To Meet Someone Over The Holidays? Mate1 Dating Site - Holiday Coupon Code - 3 Months Absolutely Free! Mate1 boasts a membership of over 16 million online.


Review a Web Developer Wiki
Hi everyone, I'd like to get your feedback on a structured wiki for web developers. The site's url is: http://www.appliedstacks.com/ The purpose of the site is to document the.


link exchange pr3+ web-design and seo - Webmaster Forum
I have new pr3-4 sites for link exchange: imuridesign.com and thedesignjockeysessions.com What I Offer: links from content and homepages with pr1-4.


 

 

Acne
Advertising
Advice
Aerobics-Cardio
Affiliate Programs
Alternative
Arts
Attraction
Auctions
Audio-Streaming
Autos
Awards
Babies-Toddler
Beauty
Blogging-RSS
Book-Marketing
Branding
Breast-Cervical-Ovarian-Cancer
Broadband-Internet
Build-Muscle
Business
Cancer
Careers-Employment
Casino-Gambling
CGI
Coaching
Coffee
College-University
Colon-Rectal-Cancer
Communications
Computers
Cooking-Tips
Copywriting
Crafts-Hobbies
Creativity
Credit
Cruising-Sailing
CSS
Currency-Trading
Customer-Service
Dating
Debt-Consolidation
Debt-Relief
DHTML
Diabetes
Direct Mail
Divorce
Domain Names
EBooks
ECommerce
Education
Elder-Care
Email-Marketing
Email Entertainment
Entrepreneurialism
Environment
Exercise
Ezine-Marketing
Ezine-Publishing
Family
Finance
Fishing
Fitness
Food
Free
Games
Gardening
General
Goal-Setting
Golf
Government
Grief-Loss
Hair-Loss
Happiness
Hardware
Health
Hobbies
Holidays
Home-Security
Homes
Home Business
Home Repair
HTML
Humanities
Humor
Innovation
Inspirational
Interior-Decorating
Internet-Marketing
Javascript
Kids And Teens
Landscaping-Gardening
Law
Leadership
Leases-Leasing
Legal
Leukemia
Link Popularity
Loans
Lung-Cancer
Lymphoma-Cancer
Management
Marketing
Marriage-Wedding
Martial-Arts
Medicine
Meditation
Men's-Issues
Metaphysical
MLM
Mobile-Cell-Phone
Mortgage-Refinance
Motivational
Multimedia
Music
Negotiation
Network-Marketing
Networking
News-and-Society
Newsletters
Nutrition
Off-Line Promotion
Online Business
Online Promotion
Organizing
Other
Outdoors
Page Rank
Parenting
Personal-Tech
Pets
Photography
Podcasting
Poetry
Politics
Positive-Attitude
PPC-Advertising
Presentation
Prostate-Cancer
Psychology
Public-Speaking
Publishing
Real-Estate
Recipes
Recreation
Reference
Relationships
Religion
Sales
Sales-Management
Sales-Teleselling
Sales-Training
Satellite-Radio
Satellite-TV
Scams
Science
Security
Self Help
Self Improvement
Sexuality
SE Optimization SE Positioning
SE Tactics
Shopping
Site-Promotion
Site Security
Skin-Cancer
Small-Business
Social Issues
Society
Software
Spam
Spirituality
Sports
Stocks-Mutual-Funds
Strategic-Planning
Stress-Management
Structured-Settlements
Success
Supplements
Taxes
Team-Building
Technology
Teleseminars
Time-Management
Traffic-Building
Traffic Analysis
Travel
Uterine-Cancer
Vacation-Rentals
Video-Conferencing
Video-Streaming
Viral Marketing
VOIP
Web-Development
Webmasters
Web Design
Web Hosting
Weight Loss
Wine-Spirits
Women
Writing
Yoga
 

Copyright © abcarticles.info  2005. All Rights Reserved.