Revision as of 02:33, 2 February 2006 editAction potential (talk | contribs)Pending changes reviewers9,090 editsm remove engram (NLP) -- this is not a widely held view← Previous edit | Revision as of 04:04, 2 February 2006 edit undoAntaeus Feldspar (talk | contribs)17,763 edits it doesn't have to be a widely-held view; it just has to be wide enough that someone might plausibly go to Engram looking for itNext edit → | ||
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* In ], a memory trace caused by stimuli; see ]. | * In ], a memory trace caused by stimuli; see ]. | ||
* In ], a past memory containing some unconsciousness, masked from view by unconsciousness; see ]. | * In ], a past memory containing some unconsciousness, masked from view by unconsciousness; see ]. | ||
* According to some ] (NLP) theorists, a patterned response which has been stabilised at the level of unconscious competence; see ]. | |||
{{disambig}} | {{disambig}} |
Revision as of 04:04, 2 February 2006
The term engram may refer to one of the following:
- In Neuropsychology, a memory trace caused by stimuli; see Engram (neuropsychology).
- In Dianetics, a past memory containing some unconsciousness, masked from view by unconsciousness; see Engram (Dianetics).
- According to some Neuro-linguistic programming (NLP) theorists, a patterned response which has been stabilised at the level of unconscious competence; see Neuro-linguistic programming.
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