About: Photographic Memory   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Photographic memory, also known as reverse omniscience (OM) and Far Queet's Syndrome (FQS) is a process whereby information is taken into the brain in short rapid snapshots just like a camera. Obviously this is where the name comes from. Although it implies everything is recorded perfectly, not everyone has the same quality mechanisms, or even film.

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Photographic Memory
  • Photographic Memory
  • Photographic memory
rdfs:comment
  • Photographic memory, also known as reverse omniscience (OM) and Far Queet's Syndrome (FQS) is a process whereby information is taken into the brain in short rapid snapshots just like a camera. Obviously this is where the name comes from. Although it implies everything is recorded perfectly, not everyone has the same quality mechanisms, or even film.
  • La tienda ofrece desarrollo de fotos de una hora, álbumes de fotos y cuadros. Harry puede recibir un mensaje de eco, "Niño problemático", cerca de un mostrador.​
  • Photographic Memory is a photography shop in Toluca Mall that Harry Mason visits in Silent Hill: Shattered Memories. He enters it from a back hallway, and must hop over the counter in order to exit through the main door and make his way to the Cine-Real movie theater. The shop offers one-hour photo development, photo albums, and frames. Harry can get an echo message, "Problem Child," near a display stand.
  • Photographic Memory, technically called eidetic memory, is the ability to recall images, sounds or objects in memory with near perfect accuracy and in abundant volume. True eidetic memory is not simply "exceptional memory for details", but involves memory which actually works in a way vastly different from normal memory, specifically, the ability to "capture" an image after a short exposure, such that the eideticer has the subjective experience of actually still seeing it even after it has been removed. Someone with a good memory can notice details about something they see, and then recall those details months later. Someone with an eidetic memory can look at something, remember it later, and, when remembering it, notice details they completely missed the first time.
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:resource/0hISFACIwtdcoWrkSZMHCQ==
  • Centro comercial Toluca
dbkwik:resource/1HAksLkQe-fCHonuepG9Aw==
  • Silent Hill: Shattered Memories
Bosses
  • None
buildingimage
  • Photographicmemory.jpg
dbkwik:all-the-tro...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:allthetrope...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:silenthill/...iPageUsesTemplate
Appearances
  • Silent Hill: Shattered Memories
Nombre
  • Photographic Memory
Name
  • Photographic Memory
ImageSize
  • 250(xsd:integer)
Keys
  • None
dbkwik:es.silenthi...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:resource/QGMnQKCdd9K7GSt9TGdu7g==
  • 1(xsd:integer)
dbkwik:resource/mGUNOtW78UAP6rwYBdARkQ==
  • Ninguno
imagen
  • Photographicmemory.jpg
ImageCaption
  • Photographic Memory
Floors
  • 1(xsd:integer)
Location
  • Toluca Mall
abstract
  • Photographic Memory, technically called eidetic memory, is the ability to recall images, sounds or objects in memory with near perfect accuracy and in abundant volume. True eidetic memory is not simply "exceptional memory for details", but involves memory which actually works in a way vastly different from normal memory, specifically, the ability to "capture" an image after a short exposure, such that the eideticer has the subjective experience of actually still seeing it even after it has been removed. Someone with a good memory can notice details about something they see, and then recall those details months later. Someone with an eidetic memory can look at something, remember it later, and, when remembering it, notice details they completely missed the first time. While many people can claim to possess an extraordinary memory, most researchers believe that it is unlikely that true eidetic memory exists in adults, and most cases of "real life" photographic memories are either the result of intense training and devotion, such as among composers, or abnormalities of the brain. Solomon Shereshevsky and Kim Peek, the inspiration for Rain Man are ones of the rare confirmed real life examples. A more contemporary example is Jill Price who has almost perfect recall of events that have happened during her life due to constant reinforcement of memories through journals. On TV, every third character has a photographic memory, which here means only that they recall everything they see. When needed for the plot. Sometimes paired with Laser-Guided Amnesia for ironic effect. If the narrator has this, he is an Infallible Narrator. Contrast Remembered Too Late. Examples of Photographic Memory include:
  • Photographic memory, also known as reverse omniscience (OM) and Far Queet's Syndrome (FQS) is a process whereby information is taken into the brain in short rapid snapshots just like a camera. Obviously this is where the name comes from. Although it implies everything is recorded perfectly, not everyone has the same quality mechanisms, or even film.
  • La tienda ofrece desarrollo de fotos de una hora, álbumes de fotos y cuadros. Harry puede recibir un mensaje de eco, "Niño problemático", cerca de un mostrador.​
  • Photographic Memory is a photography shop in Toluca Mall that Harry Mason visits in Silent Hill: Shattered Memories. He enters it from a back hallway, and must hop over the counter in order to exit through the main door and make his way to the Cine-Real movie theater. The shop offers one-hour photo development, photo albums, and frames. Harry can get an echo message, "Problem Child," near a display stand.
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