It is as if a flashbulb suddenly clicked brightly inside his dark, dark brain. |
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Therefore, a desired aesthetic goal is a face with defined planes that will reflect favourably from lights of a flashbulb, yet not look drawn. |
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Like a flashbulb illuminating fog, light from the outburst of a star has revealed its dusty surroundings. |
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When we came out of the restaurant it was flashbulb city and you can't see a thing. |
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As a photographer took his photo and the flashbulb went off, the child screamed loudly. |
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It's as though when we first learn of it a flashbulb has imprinted in our recall the details of the event. |
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Painful experiences are better encoded in our memories, one of the reasons that flashbulb memories are so frequent. |
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His site presents a list of known flashbulb models by brand, with links to photographs of many of the flashbulbs in his collection. |
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He found that flashbulb memories were no more steady than any other memory. |
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The tangle of enormous fake diamonds resting on top of her cleavage sparkles at every flashbulb. |
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Each flashbulb can, however, yield only one flash. |
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Sometimes the assassination of a leader is so shocking and profound that it triggers what psychologists call flashbulb memory in a country's citizens. |
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Those photos are early examples of flashbulb photography. |
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The invention of the flashbulb came in 1931, and General Electric manufactured more than 1 million bulbs during its first year of production. |
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The stars were all very gracious, beaming and shaking hands as Studley's flashbulb fired and froze the scene in history. |
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These so called flashbulb memories seem to form in response to highly surprising and personally relevant events and are assumed to be triggered by emotional factors. |
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So well, in fact, that researchers in 2002 reported that they could ignite such nanotubes with a camera flashbulb. |
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And so, right at the beginning of the exhibition, each and everyone walks through Interview, 2000, a flashbulb storm built by Malachi Farrell. |
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Thus, flashbulb memories require no special memory mechanism wired for perfect recall, according to these researchers. |
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The flashbulb, developed in the 1920s, is a transparent envelope filled with oxygen and a tangle of fine aluminum, magnesium, or zirconium wire ignitable by an electrically heated filament or, rarely, a chemical deflagrator. |
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Sometime around 1700 the monster flashbulb called the Scottish enlightenment began. |
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Early in his career, Neisser became fascinated by the concept of flashbulb memories — the times when a shocking, emotional event seems to leave a particularly vivid imprint on the mind. |
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Although Mr. Hirst said he would have to wait a year before he could interview his subjects again to see how their flashbulb memories had changed, he had some idea of what he would find. |
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Mr Fuller's breathless tales of youthful guile, and his flashbulb snapshots of legendary New Yorkers, are as entertaining as a well-edited tabloid. His war memories are often electrifying. |
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Current flashbulb systems use four to 10 tiny bulbs, each in its own reflector, arranged in cube or bar carriers that plug into cameras designed for them. |
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But flashbulb memories are neither always accurate nor immune to forgetting, report psychologist Michael McCloskey and his colleagues at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. |
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Vivid recollections of one's surroundings and other personal experiences at the time of momentous, surprising events have been dubbed flashbulb memories. |
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