Memory formation in matter
Nathan C. Keim, Joseph D. Paulsen, Zorana Zeravcic, Srikanth Sastry,, Sidney R. Nagel

TL;DR
This paper explores the phenomenon of memory formation in various matter systems, emphasizing the importance of non-equilibrium behavior and aiming to develop a unified understanding across disciplines.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of different types of material memories and seeks to establish a unifying conceptual framework for understanding memory effects in matter.
Findings
Identification of key memory behaviors in materials
Discussion of memory phenomena across disciplines
Proposal for a unified conceptual framework
Abstract
Memory formation in matter is a theme of broad intellectual relevance; it sits at the interdisciplinary crossroads of physics, biology, chemistry, and computer science. Memory connotes the ability to encode, access, and erase signatures of past history in the state of a system. Once the system has completely relaxed to thermal equilibrium, it is no longer able to recall aspects of its evolution. Memory of initial conditions or previous training protocols will be lost. Thus many forms of memory are intrinsically tied to far-from-equilibrium behavior and to transient response to a perturbation. This general behavior arises in diverse contexts in condensed matter physics and materials: phase change memory, shape memory, echoes, memory effects in glasses, return-point memory in disordered magnets, as well as related contexts in computer science. Yet, as opposed to the situation in biology,…
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