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BIOLOGICAL BASIS OF MEMORY

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BIOLOGICAL BASIS OF MEMORY Biological Basis of Memory Memory and the Brain Play The Locus of Learning and Memory (6:28) Module #16 from The Brain: Teaching ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: BIOLOGICAL BASIS OF MEMORY


1
BIOLOGICAL BASIS OF MEMORY
2
Biological Basis of Memory
Karl Lashley searched for a localized memory
trace or engram
Believed that memory was localized specific
memory stored in a specific area. Removed parts
of rats cerebral cortex but found no one area
contained the memory of the maze Found that
maze-learning in rats was distributed throughout
the brain
3
Memory and the Brain
  • Play The Locus of Learning and Memory (628)
    Module 16 from The Brain Teaching Modules (2nd
    edition).
  • Watch first 3 minutes on Lashleys Experiment and
    if time view Penfields experiment why it was
    flawed.

4
Biological Basis of Memory
  • Thought that cerebellum was changed after
    classically conditioning a rabbit to blink to a
    tone. He was right!
  • Removing this area caused the rabbit to no longer
    blink to a tone but only reflexively. Shows
    localized memory.
  • This did not work for complex behaviors like
    running a maze, which seem to be distributed

Richard Thompson Reflexive Behaviors are
localized in the cerebellum
5
Biological Basis of Memory
  • fMRI shows that when people memorized the label
    dog with the sound of a bark the auditory
    cortex activated when they retrieved it.
  • Those memorized the label dog to a picture
    activated their visual cortex when they retrieved
    it.
  • Retrieving a memory reactivates the sensory area
    of the cortex that was involved in the initial
    perception of the event. (See images on pg. 268)

6
New Memories in a Snail
  • Aplysiaa sea snail was used to study how
    memories can change neurons

Eric Kandel
7
Kandels Sea Snail Experiment
  • Eric Kandel studied neural changes that took
    place in Aplysia, a sea snail. Click HERE to
    view it (4 min)
  • Squirted it with water followed by an electric
    shock that classically conditioned it to
    withdrawal its gills next time it was squirted.
  • This changed the three neuron circuit in the
    snail.
  • Function of the neuron changed with increase in
    the amount of the neurotransmitter produced by
    the neuron.
  • Structure of the neuron changed with the number
    of interconnecting dendrites and axon terminals
    increasing allowing for more communication points
    (synapses).

8
Long-Term Potentiation
  • Two possible changes should occur in the neurons
    in forming memories.
  • Functioning of neurons in the brain could change
  • Structure of the neurons could change.
  • These increase the neurons firing potential
  • Kandels experiment shows this.
  • Believed to be the neural basis of learning and
    memory

9
Severe Memory Loss
  • Amnesiasevere memory loss
  • 3 Major Types
  • Retrograde Amnesia
  • Anterograde Amnesia
  • Infantile Amnesia

10
Retrograde amnesia
  • Retrograde amnesiainability to remember PAST
    episodic information common after head injury
  • Reason for this is it may disrupt
  • Memory Consolidation gradual, physical process
    of converting a long-term memory to a stable and
    enduring memory code.
  • If disturbed before the process is complete,
    memory could be lost.
  • Sleep seems to be when most memory consolidation
    occurs

11
Anterograde amnesia
  • Anterograde amnesiainability to form NEW
    memories related to hippocampus damage
  • Shows that hippocampus must be used in the
    encoding of new memories and transferring them
    from STM to LTM.
  • Implicit memories like procedural memories do
    still occur showing that these may not involve
    the hippocampus but knowing they are there
    (explicit memory) does not work showing the
    hippocampus is involved in these.

12
Infantile Amnesia
  • Infantile Amnesia Inability to recall events
    from the first few years of life.
  • Possible Reasons for this
  • Too many differences between the world of an
    infant and ours for us to be able to make
    connections or retrieval cues to retrieve them
    (encoding specificity principle).
  • Hippocampus is still developing so they cannot
    form new LTM but they can make procedural
    memories.
  • One reason adults typically recall little of
    their first three years of life is that during
    infancy they were unable to verbally label most
    of their experiences (semantically encode the
    info).

13
Brain Structures Involved in Memory
14
Emotions the Amygdala
  • Amygdala may help in formation of emotional
    memories.
  • Watch Enhancing Memory (750) to see how research
    is showing this. Click below.

15
Evidence for Separate Implicit/Explicit Systems
  • Neurophysiological evidence
  • Patient H.M. (Henry Gustav Molaison)
  • life-threatening seizures originating in temporal
    lobe
  • surgically removed portions of temporal lobe

16
Temporal Lobe
  • Includes
  • hippocampus
  • Amygdala
  • Verbal information is stored in the left
    hippocampus and
  • Visual designs are stored in the right hippocampus

17
Patient H.M.
  • Click HERE for a video on H.M. (10 Min)
  • Surgery was effective in reducing seizures
  • BUT, had other side effects as well
  • Can remember explicit memories acquired before
    the surgery
  • e.g., old addresses, normal vocabulary
  • Cannot form NEW explicit memories
  • e.g., remembering the name of someone he met 30
    minutes prior
  • cannot name new world leaders or performers
  • can recognize a picture of himself from before
    his surgery but not from after and doesnt
    recognize himself in a mirror

18
Patient H.M.
  • H.M. has severe explicit / declarative memory
    disorder
  • H.M. is almost normal on procedural or implicit
    memory tasks including priming, classical
    conditioning, and learning motor skills
  • When given the same logical puzzle to solve for
    several days in a row, H. M. was able to solve
    the puzzle more quickly each day.
  • This shows that explicit memory depends upon the
    temporal lobes and implicit does not

19
Patient H.M. Summary
  • Temporal lobe damage led to deficits in explicit,
    but not implicit memory
  • H.M. had both episodic and semantic memory
    deficits
  • Damage to the hippocampus alone produces
    episodic, but not semantic memory deficits
  • Why did H.M. show both types of explicit memory
    deficits?
  • He had damage not only to hippocampus, but to
    other structures as well

20
Memory and the Hippocampus
  • Damage to the hippocampus would result in the
    inability to form new explicit memories, but the
    ability to remember the skills of implicit
    memories
  • To view someone with this damage checkout the
    video by clicking on it (738)

21
Memory and the Hippocampus
22
Hippocampus and Memory
  • Play Living with Amnesia The Hippocampus and
    Memory (1035) Module 18 from The Brain
    Teaching Modules (2nd edition).
  • Watch if Time Allows.

23
Aging and Memory
  • Studies have found that the ability to recall new
    information, unaided by clues, declines with age,
  • But the ability to recognize new information, as
    in a multiple-choice question, does not.
  • Elderly may need more time to retrieve memories
    but still can do as well as a young person.

24
Culture Memory
  • Levy and Langer study of cultural views of aging
    show that societys expectation that older people
    will have poorer memories can be a
    self-fulfilling prophecy.
  • In cultures where that is not believed (Asia) the
    elderly show memories just as good as the young.

25
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