A distributed representation of temporal context
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Publication:1867355
DOI10.1006/JMPS.2001.1388zbMATH Open1027.91071OpenAlexW2001788447WikidataQ55878649 ScholiaQ55878649MaRDI QIDQ1867355FDOQ1867355
Authors: Marc W. Howard, Michael J. Kahana
Publication date: 2 April 2003
Published in: Journal of Mathematical Psychology (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://semanticscholar.org/paper/9b1df5b85c7e13edc350b68173eeb2b7840dffb1
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Cited In (25)
- Estimating scale-invariant future in continuous time
- Mathematical learning theory through time
- The form of the forgetting curve and the fate of memories
- Egocentric Temporal Action Proposals
- The memory tesseract: mathematical equivalence between composite and separate storage memory models
- Judgements of frequency and recency in a distributed memory model.
- Bidirectional constraint satisfaction in rational strategic decision making
- An order-dependent transfer model in categorization
- A model for contextual fluctuation
- An application of multinomial processing tree models and Bayesian methods to understanding memory impairment
- Recalling the list-before-last: a cautionary tale
- Place from time: Reconstructing position from a distributed representation of temporal con\-text
- Free-Lunch Learning: Modeling Spontaneous Recovery of Memory
- Sequential learning using temporal context
- Scaling Laws of Associative Memory Retrieval
- A scale-invariant internal representation of time
- Chaining models of serial recall can produce positional errors
- Scaling behavior in the temporal context model
- A model of contextual effect on reproduced extents in recall tasks: the issue of the imputed motion hypothesis
- Associative isolation: Unifying associative and list memory
- Integrating theoretical models with functional neuroimaging
- Flexible working memory through selective gating and attentional tagging
- Hippocampal mechanisms for the context-dependent retrieval of episodes
- Adding a bias to vector models of association memory provides item memory for free
- How humans learn and represent networks
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