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Memory Systems

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Case 3: Kate; age 22. age 9 years - a toxic dose of a drug for asthma; ... Jon's performance approximated 2 age-matched controls and exceeded that of amnesia group ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Memory Systems


1
Memory Systems
2
Two Views of Episodic and Semantic Memory
  • Declarative memory comprises both fact and event
    memory and is a unitary process
  • Episodic and semantic memory are independent

3
Is there amnesia after childhood brain lesions?
  • Until recently few cases reported with lesions
    early in life
  • Why??

4
Is there an age below which hippocampal injury
does not cause a selective amnesia?
  • Plausible explanations
  • Very early damage to the memory system would have
    a widespread impact on cognitive development -
    result would be a profound and global mental
    delay
  • Plasticity and re-organizational capacity of the
    immature brain would lead to a sparing/rescue of
    the memory system.

5
Neither is correct ...
  • Cases identified with hippocampal damage in
    childhood and an amnesic syndrome
  • Amnesia different from that seen in adults
  • Named developmental amnesia
  • Researchers Vargha-Khadem, Baddley, Isaacs,
    Mishkin others

6
Developmental Amnesia
  • Case 1 Beth age 14
  • difficult birth, anoxia
  • memory deficit noted when she went to school at
    age 5
  • Case 2 Jon age 19
  • born prematurely (26 weeks)
  • age 4 had 2 long seizures
  • memory deficit noted by parents about 1.5 years
    later.

7
  • Case 3 Kate age 22
  • age 9 years - a toxic dose of a drug for asthma
  • acute episode of seizures, unconscious,
    respiratory arrest
  • left profoundly amnesic.
  • At age 17 developed temporal-lobe epilepsy.
  • MRI scans showed that the hippocampi were
    abnormally small bilaterally in all three cases.

8
Neuropathological findings Jon
  • Hippocampal volume 50 less than normal mean
    volume
  • More subtle pathology in putamen bilaterally,
    ventral part of the thalamus, and the midbrain
  • Consistent with effects of hypoxia-ischemia
  • Preserved memory might be due in part to
    preservation of subjacent cortex in the
    parahippocampal region

9
Nature of memory impairment
  • Failed to remember the events of daily life.
  • Spatial
  • Temporal
  • Episodic
  • BUT made progress in School

10
Episodic Memory
11
Semantic Memory
12
Developmental Amnesia
  • Selective pattern of impairments affecting new
    episodic but not new semantic memories
  • Bilateral hippocampal damage
  • No obvious damage to cortex surrounding the
    hippocampus
  • entorhinal
  • perirhinal
  • parahippocampal

cortices
13
Developmental Amnesia
  • Episodic memory impairment -
  • due to hippocampal pathology
  • Intact semantic memory
  • due to integrity of surrounding cortices

14
Alternative possibilities for limited form of
memory deficit in developmental amnesia
  • Partial sparing of hippocampal formation
  • OR
  • Functional reorganisation and compensation after
    early damage
  • not possible with damage acquired later in life

15
Test of the early injury hypothesis
16
Test of the early injury hypothesis
  • If timing of hippocampal lesion was the
    determining factor, then the late onset group
    should have impairments similar to the amnesia
    seen in adults

17
Findings
  • Memory impairment in the late-onset group was
    immediately apparent after the injury
  • Otherwise, few significant differences
  • Equally impaired on episodic memory tests
  • Equivalent sparing on semantic memory tests
  • Late group worse on immediate memory

18
Early vs. Late Injury Episodic Tests
Normal range
19
Early vs. Late Injury Semantic Tests
Normal range
20
Conclusion re Age of Lesion
  • If developmental amnesia is a special syndrome
    related to early lesion of the hippocampus, the
    effective age at injury can extend to
    adolescence.

21
Another Feature of Developmental Amnesia
  • Intact recognition
  • Not usually seen in adult amnesia (we will see
    the exceptions later)

22
Delayed Recognition Tests
  • Forced choice recognition test (5 min. delay)
  • Yes/no recognition test (5 min. delay)
  • Jons performance approximated 2 age-matched
    controls and exceeded that of amnesia group

23
Normal Recognition / Impaired Recall
Visual
Verbal
Amnesic
controls
Lower limit of normal range
24
Normal Recognition / Impaired Recall
  • Problem Measures differ in difficulty
  • Solution Doors and People Test
  • Recall and recognition of visual and verbal
    stimuli designed to be or equal difficulty
  • Jon Recall
  • Recognition 50 75th percentile
  • Controls 50 75th percentile on both recall and
    recognition

25
Continuous Recognition Test
  • Sequence of words is presented
  • Test of running recognition
  • Decide when each word is presented
  • Decide where it has been shown before
  • Repetitions can occur immediately or after
    1,2,4,8, or 16 intervening words
  • Results
  • Score 97.3, exceeding controls and mean for
    normal subjects
  • Also had a higher false alarm rate

26
Neuropsychological evidence for a
recall-recognition dissociation
  • A number of atypical cases have been reported in
    which recognition is preserved in amnesic
    patients
  • Bilateral fornix damage
  • Damage to mamillary bodies
  • Patients who sustained anoxia
  • Alcohol-induced Wernickes encephalopathy
  • Anterior communicating artery aneurysm
  • Possible preservation of recognition memory in
    amnesics when damage is limited to the
    hippocampus or its diencephalic targets

27
Implications of test results
  • Despite clear evidence of amnesia, Jon has a well
    preserved recognition memory
  • He is atypical from adult-onset amnesia in that
  • He has a significant recall-recognition disparity
  • He can increment semantic memory despite his
    episodic memory deficit

28
  • Perhaps its not his ability to recall per se
    thats impaired but his ability to use episodic
    memory to facilitate recall of newly acquired
    information
  • Can recall names of historic figures, word
    definitions, discuss current political issues at
    length

29
Another Test
  • Since Jon has acquired an extensive amount of
    semantic knowledge, learning should occur when
    naturalistic material is presented repeatedly
  • Presented with a series of video-based newsreels
  • One presented 4 times in 2 days, other only once
  • Recall and recognition tested
  • Immediately after final presentation in each case
  • 18 hours later
  • Results
  • Immediate recognition comparable to controls
  • Delayed recognition slightly below controls
  • Immediate recall much lower than controls
  • With 4 presentations, immediate recall increases
    substantially

30
Remember vs. Know
  • Words presented and tested by yes/no recognition
  • For yes answers, do you remember or know?
  • Ask why they remember on some questions
  • Results
  • Overall Hit rate .917
  • Jon used the remember judgment more than
    controls
  • When questioned, he said he looked at the word,
    tried to imagine it printed on the stimulus card,
    and if a clear image came to mind he remembered
    it
  • May lack ability to recall contextual detail
    consistent with a remember response

31
Discussion
  • While recognition performance is in the normal
    range, his performance may still be impaired
  • Initially tempting to conclude that dissociation
    between recall and recognition reflects 2 memory
    systems, but shouldnt because
  • Single dissociation
  • Recall and recognition not direct measures of
    memory systems
  • John is able to recall a lot of semantic
    information

32
Discussion
  • Consider findings in terms of processes
    underlying recall and recognition
  • 2 underlying processes of recognition memory
  • Recollective (remember)
  • Automatic (know)
  • Failure to teach Jon the R/K distinction suggests
    he cant use the recollective source of evidence
  • Jon shows an electrophysiological index
    associated with stimulus familiarity, but lacks
    one for episodic recollection during recognition
    tasks

33
Discussion
  • Recall involved in well-established semantic
    memory does not require the recollective process
  • Episodic recollection important to recalling new
    material
  • Therefore, an impairment in episodic recollection
    could explain his poor performance on standard
    recall tests
  • May explain difficulty in initially recalling
    items that improves with practice
  • May have acquired large store of semantic
    information through repetition
  • His preserved abilities may also be a result of
    the developmental nature of his deficit

34
An unusual case of amnesia
  • Neil suffered from a pineal tumour at age 13.
  • Three impairments
  • Alexia,
  • Visual agnosia
  • Amnesia profound in all sensory modalities
  • Able to retrieve postmorbid memories through
    writing without having any awareness of the
    content of his written report.

35
Memory Retrieval Through Writing
  • Anterograde amnesia is usually attributed to a
    defect in the mechanism responsible for placing
    newly acquired information into a long-term
    store.
  • The same interpretation cannot be applied to
    Neils disorder given his ability to retrieve
    memories through writing even though he is unable
    to give an oral account of the contents of his
    writing.

36
The dissociation in Neils memory performance
raises two possibilities
  • There are normally 2 different long-term stores
    for the same information, or
  • The information in any given long-term store can
    be retrieved through two different response
    modalities.
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