You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly. You should upgrade or use an alternative browser.
associative memory
About this tag
The associative memory tag on WindowsForum.com covers discussions about how the brain prioritizes and stores information based on social interaction cues. Recent threads highlight research showing that pairs of faces appearing to interact are more likely to be encoded and recalled than non-interacting pairs. This content explores the cognitive science behind associative memory as a prioritization system, emphasizing its role in remembering social bonds. While the tag is not directly about Windows or Microsoft, it may interest users exploring memory, cognition, or human-computer interaction design.
Human memory is not a passive archive — it’s a efficiency engine, and a set of new experiments summarized in Psychology Today argues that our brains preferentially encode pairs of people who look like they’re interacting, making these dyads easier to recall later than two people who merely...
People remember people who look like they belong together — and a set of new experiments summarized in a Psychology Today writeup argues that social interaction itself is a cue the brain uses to prioritize associative memory, making pairs of faces that appear to be interacting more likely to be...