noun a person experiencing anterograde amnesia
adjective relating to or denoting a type of amnesia in which a person is unable to remember new information after a specific event
In psychology, anterograde amnesia is a type of memory loss where new information cannot be stored in long-term memory.
In medicine, anterograde transport is the movement of molecules or signals from the cell body of a neuron towards the axon terminals.
In neuroscience, anterograde refers to the impairment of forming new memories after a specific event or injury.
In a literary context, the term 'anterograde' may be used to describe a narrative technique where the story progresses in a chronological order, moving forward in time.
Psychologists may use the term 'anterograde amnesia' to refer to a condition where an individual is unable to form new memories after a certain point in time, often associated with brain injuries or medical conditions.
Neuroscientists may use 'anterograde tracing' to describe a technique used to trace the pathways of neural connections in the brain from the point of injection forward in time.
Pharmacologists may use the term 'anterograde transport' to describe the movement of molecules or substances in a cell or organism from the point of origin towards the direction of the cell body or target site.