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  2. The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Legend_of_Zelda:...

    Link travels across Hyrule, returning to locations from his past and regaining his memories. At the behest of Hyrule's peoples, [c] he boards the four Divine Beasts and purges them of the Blight Ganons, freeing the captive spirits of Hyrule's fallen Champions and allowing them to pilot the Divine Beasts once again. After freeing the Champion's ...

  3. Sidon (The Legend of Zelda) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sidon_(The_Legend_of_Zelda)

    Sidon also appears in the Memory "Champion Mipha's Song" in The Champion's Ballad, the second DLC pack for Breath of the Wild, a flashback which shows him as a baby with Mipha. [13] In the storyline, it is revealed that Mipha is one of the four Champions who helped Zelda and Link fight against Calamity Ganon 100 years earlier, but died in the ...

  4. The Legend of Zelda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Legend_of_Zelda

    The Legend of Zelda [a] is a media franchise created by the Japanese game designers Shigeru Miyamoto and Takashi Tezuka.It is primarily developed and published by Nintendo; some portable installments and re-releases have been outsourced to Flagship, Vanpool, Grezzo, and Tantalus Media.

  5. Memory address - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memory_address

    In a computer using virtual memory, accessing the location corresponding to a memory address may involve many levels. In computing, a memory address is a reference to a specific memory location in memory used by both software and hardware. [1] These addresses are fixed-length sequences of digits, typically displayed and handled as unsigned ...

  6. Eidetic memory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eidetic_memory

    Eidetic memory (/ aɪ ˈ d ɛ t ɪ k / eye-DET-ik), also known as photographic memory and total recall, is the ability to recall an image from memory with high precision—at least for a brief period of time—after seeing it only once [1] and without using a mnemonic device.

  7. Memory map - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memory_map

    In computer science, a memory map is a structure of data (which usually resides in memory itself) that indicates how memory is laid out. The term "memory map" has different meanings in different contexts. It is the fastest and most flexible cache organization that uses an associative memory. The associative memory stores both the address and ...

  8. Engram (neuropsychology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Engram_(neuropsychology)

    The term "engram" was coined by memory researcher Richard Semon in reference to the physical substrate of memory in the organism. Semon warned, however: "In animals, during the evolutionary process, one organic system—the nervous system—has become specialised for the reception and transmission of stimuli.

  9. Neuroanatomy of memory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neuroanatomy_of_memory

    Lobes in this cortex are more closely associated with memory and in particular autobiographical memory. [15] The temporal lobes are also concerned with recognition memory. This is the capacity to identify an item as one that was recently encountered. [16] Recognition memory is widely viewed as consisting of two components, a familiarity ...