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Due to the elusive nature of involuntary recurrent memories, very little is known about the subjective experience of flashbacks. However, theorists agree that this phenomenon is in part due to the manner in which memories of specific events are initially encoded (or entered) into memory, the way in which the memory is organized, and also the way in which the individual later recalls the event. [5]
A flashback, more formally known as analepsis, is an interjected scene that takes the narrative back in time from the current point in the story. [1] Flashbacks are often used to recount events that happened before the story's primary sequence of events to fill in crucial backstory. [2]
Hallucinogen-persisting perception disorder was first described in 1954, [9] with other observations made in early psychedelic research. [10] Horowitz [11] first introduced the term flashbacks, referring to recurrent and spontaneous perceptual distortions and unbidden images. When these "flashbacks" present as recurrent, but without a current ...
Flashback: Meta’s ‘history of censorship,’ fact-checking woes under the Trump, Biden administrations ... Republicans later claimed that Zuckerberg made false statements to Congress in April ...
Flashback (Trojan), computer malware that infects computers running Mac OS X Atari Flashback series, a line of video-game consoles that emulate 1980s-era Atari games; Oracle Flashback, a means of retrieving data as it existed in an Oracle database at an earlier time
The made-for-television drama Two Friends (1986), by Jane Campion, and the 1997 episode, "The Betrayal", of the hit sitcom Seinfeld, employs the technique. The Seinfeld episode is a take-off of the Harold Pinter play Betrayal and has a character named "Pinter."
The 1980s restaurant’s name didn’t cow customers, who loved its food.
The big guns come out late in any Academy Awards broadcast — and the 77th Oscars, held on Feb. 27, 2005, at the Kodak Theatre in Los Angeles — was no different.