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reminiscence
rem·i·nis·cence R0145600 (rĕm′ə-nĭs′əns)n.1. The act or process of recollecting past experiences or events.2. An experience or event recollected: "Her mind seemed wholly taken up with reminiscences of past gaiety" (Charlotte Brontë).3. often reminiscences A narration of past experiences.4. An event that brings to mind a similar, former event.reminiscence (ˌrɛmɪˈnɪsəns) n1. the act of recalling or narrating past experiences2. (often plural) some past experience, event, etc, that is recalled or narrated; anecdote3. an event, phenomenon, or experience that reminds one of something else4. (Philosophy) (in the philosophy of Plato) the doctrine that perception and recognition of particulars is possible because the mind has seen the universal forms of all things in a previous disembodied existence5. (Psychology) psychol the ability to perform a task better when tested some time after the task has been learnt than when tested immediately after learning itrem•i•nis•cence (ˌrɛm əˈnɪs əns) n. 1. the act or process of recalling the past. 2. a mental impression retained and revived. 3. Often, reminiscences. a recollection narrated. 4. something that recalls something else. ThesaurusNoun | 1. | reminiscence - a mental impression retained and recalled from the pastmemory - something that is remembered; "search as he would, the memory was lost" | | 2. | reminiscence - the process of remembering (especially the process of recovering information by mental effort); "he has total recall of the episode"recollection, recallremembering, memory - the cognitive processes whereby past experience is remembered; "he can do it from memory"; "he enjoyed remembering his father"mind - recall or remembrance; "it came to mind"reconstructive memory, reconstruction - recall that is hypothesized to work by storing abstract features which are then used to construct the memory during recallreproductive memory, reproduction - recall that is hypothesized to work by storing the original stimulus input and reproducing it during recallregurgitation - recall after rote memorization; "he complained that school was just memorization and regurgitation" |
reminiscencenoun1. An act or instance of remembering:memory, recollection, remembrance.2. The power of retaining and recalling past experience:memory, recall, recollection, remembrance.3. A narrative of experiences undergone by the writer.Often used in plural:commentary (often used in plural), memoir.TranslationsReminiszenzréminiscenceabbandonarsi ai ricordiche ricordamemoriareminiscenzaricordo
Reminiscence
reminiscence1. (in the philosophy of Plato) the doctrine that perception and recognition of particulars is possible because the mind has seen the universal forms of all things in a previous disembodied existence 2. Psychol the ability to perform a task better when tested some time after the task has been learnt than when tested immediately after learning it Reminiscence in a work of literature (generally poetry), a recollection evoked in the reader by the unconscious or conscious borrowing of images or rhythmic and syntactic devices from a different work, another’s or the author’s own. Examples are “I have survived both much and many” (P. A. Viazemskii) and “I have betrayed both much and many” (V. Ia. Briusov). The value of reminiscence as a literary device depends on the reader’s memory and powers of perception.
Reminiscence improvement of the memory. According to the basic law of retention, proposed by H. Ebbinghaus (Germany), the recall of learned material must decay with time. Nevertheless, studies on reminiscence proved that the recollection of memorized material is better after some time has elapsed than immediately after memorization. This phenomenon embraces elements that could not be recalled immediately after learning as well as an overall improvement in recall. The many factors that determine the degree of reminiscence include the rapidity with which the material to be memorized is presented, the time elapsed between study periods, the degree of memorization, similarities between parts of the material, and the quantity of material. Numerous hypotheses on the nature of reminiscence have been advanced, but no satisfactory explanation of the phenomenon exists. REFERENCEEksperimental’naia psikhologiia: [Sb. st.] fase. 4. Edited and compiled by P. Fraisse and J. Piaget. Moscow, 1973. Pages 326–30. (Translated from French.)reminiscence
rem·i·nis·cence (rem'i-nis'sens), In the psychology of learning, an improvement in recall, over that shown on the last trial, of incompletely learned material after an interval without practice. [L. reminiscentiae, from reminiscor, to remember] rem·i·nis·cence (rem'i-nis'ĕns) In the psychology of learning, an improvement in recall, over that shown on the last trial, of incompletely learned material after an interval without practice. [L. reminiscentiae, from reminiscor, to remember]reminiscence
Synonyms for reminiscencenoun an act or instance of rememberingSynonyms- memory
- recollection
- remembrance
noun the power of retaining and recalling past experienceSynonyms- memory
- recall
- recollection
- remembrance
noun a narrative of experiences undergone by the writerSynonymsSynonyms for reminiscencenoun a mental impression retained and recalled from the pastRelated Wordsnoun the process of remembering (especially the process of recovering information by mental effort)SynonymsRelated Words- remembering
- memory
- mind
- reconstructive memory
- reconstruction
- reproductive memory
- reproduction
- regurgitation
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