In computing the equivalent function can be performed using content-addressable memory.
Roughly speaking, content-addressable storage is the permanent-storage analogue to content-addressable memory.
If the connections are trained using Hebbian learning then the Hopfield network can perform as robust content-addressable memory, resistant to connection alteration.
This essentially had a small content-addressable memory (CAM) that compared event times with the same 16-bit timer used for the HSI system.
Designs that use content-addressable memory (CAM) are called dynamic dataflow machines.
Higher associative caches usually employ content-addressable memory.
An example is content-addressable memory.
Perhaps the most common kind of non-von Neumann structure used in modern computers is content-addressable memory (CAM).
PE devices may also be equipped with content-addressable memory (CAM), similar to high-end Ethernet switches.
However, earlier machines used content-addressable memory (a type of hardware which provides the functionality of an associative array) in the renamer.