Yes, she does. She "wakes up in the mornin feeling like P. Diddy," and doesn't remember that he is actually in her room, thus proving that Ke$ha has short-term memory loss.
The volume of background music can affect short-term memory because they dnt
Short term. Long term is when you remember a fact or your phone number. It stays in your memory bank. Short term is not permanent but only stays for a short time. If you remember that song a week from now it would have moved to long term. Our long term memory files do get filled up and at certain ages in life we delete some of the files we don't need. One of the major deletes is around 10-11 years old.
Classical music does affect short term memory. If you need proof look at Albert Einstein his mom took out of school because he wasn't smart enough. His mother bought him a violin and that's where he started become the Albert Einstein we know today. Classical music affects short term out of all because it has more of an impact on the brain by creating more of the cells that our brain uses to make another cell that brings up and effects your I.Q. If you listen to rock or uncensored music it has less of an effect on the brain because instead of making more of the good cells it destroys them and instead it actually can create an extra personality. So pretty much to cut it short classical music affects short term memory in a good way.
What was the question again ------------------------------------------------------- In general Memory loss is referred to as Amnesia, is an abnormal degree of forgetfulness and/or inability to recall past events. Depending on the cause, memory loss may have either a sudden or gradual onset, and memory loss may be permanent or temporary. Memory loss may be limited to the inability to recall recent events, events from the distant past, or a combination of both. Memory loss has multiple causes including a number of chronic medical and psychological conditions, trauma, medications, drug or alcohol abuse, and infections. Answer for your question: Transient global amnesia (TGA) is "one of the most striking syndromes in clinical neurology" whose key defining characteristic is temporary but almost total disruption of short-term memory with a range of problems accessing older memories. A person in a state of TGA exhibits no other signs of impaired cognitive functioning but recalls only the last few moments of consciousness plus deeply-encoded facts of the individual's past, such as his or her own name. A person having an attack of TGA has almost no capacity to establish new memories, but generally appears otherwise mentally alert and lucid, possessing full knowledge of self-identity and identity of close family, and maintaining intact perceptual skills and a wide repertoire of complex learned behavior. The individual simply cannot recall anything that happened outside the last few minutes, while memory for more temporally distant events may or may not be largely intact. This onset of TGA is generally fairly rapid, and its duration varies but generally lasts between 2 to 8 hours. A person experiencing TGA typically has memory only of the past few minutes or less, and cannot retain new information beyond that period of time. One of its bizarre features is perseverance, in which the victim of an attack faithfully and methodically repeats statements or questions, complete with profoundly identical intonation and gestures "as if a fragment of a sound track is being repeatedly rerun." Other types of Amnesia includes ... Post-traumatic amnesia, Dissociative amnesia, Lacunar amnesia, Childhood amnesia, Source amnesia, Memory distrust syndrome, Blackout phenomenon, Korsakoff's syndrome, Drug-induced amnesia, Prosopamnesia, Situation-Specific amnesia etc.
The Short term for crescendo is "cresc". This may be repalced by an elongated "<".
It can be long term memory loss or retrograde memory loss. In either case it can be called amnesia.
sometimes
Yes, there can be a connection between short-term memory loss and lymes disease. Often people with lymes disease can experience brain fog and memory problems short-term.
Generally, THC accelerates memory loss by interfering with the transfer of data from short-term to long-term memory.
smoke weed.
short term memory loss
4000
Short-term Memory Loss ADD/ADHD
no it is a physical illness
hippocampus :)
some humans
Anterograde amnesia.