0% found this document useful (0 votes)
0 views

Memory and Learning Full Slides (1)

Uploaded by

D Cooper
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
0 views

Memory and Learning Full Slides (1)

Uploaded by

D Cooper
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 32

Sensation, Perception

and Beyond
The Biopsychology of Learning and Memory
What’s the importance of studying
learning and memory?
• Learning and memory underpin so many aspects of human behaviour
• Acquire new skills, knowledge, language, habits

• But also, who we are


• Think back to consciousness last week
• Sense of loss experienced when we have a family member diagnosed with
dementia

• Prevention, diagnosis and treatment


Lecture outline
• What brain areas are implicated in memory?

• What happens in the brain when we learn something new?

• Seminar/independent study;
- biopsychology of strength memories
- should we be able to erase memories?
How do we know what we know?
• By studying its absence
• And the neurological correlates of this

• Brief history:
• The case of H.M.
• Changed the landscape of understanding the link between cog and bio

• Who was H.M.?


• Henry Molaison, passed away 2008 (aged 82)
Different kinds of learning and
memory!?
• Amnesia
• Anterograde
• Retrograde
• H.M.
• Evidence that short- and long-term memory are distinct
• Amygdala, medial temporal lobes (bilateral)
• Hippocampus (most)
• Lateral = no memory loss
• Mirror-tracing task
• Showed improvement despite no recollection of it
• Evidenced a certain type of long-term memory
If you practice reading text that is mirror-
reversed, you will get better and better at
deciphering the text quickly. This is an example of
learning a perceptual skill, and does not require
an intact hippocampus
If you practice reading text that is mirror-
reversed, you will get better and better at
deciphering the text quickly. This is an example of
learning a perceptual skill, and does not require
an intact hippocampus
• The distinction is thus not between motor and verbal memory

• Declarative memory
• ‘knowing that…’

• Nondeclarative memory
• Things you can show people
Comparative research
• Monkeys need to remember
what object is new
• Form of object recognition
• Monkey declares memory for
red box by not choosing it

• Damage to medial temporal


lobes = impairment on task
mediated by time delay

Spiegler & Mishkin, 1981


Animal studies & Declarative
memory
• Selectively removed parts of the temporal lobes in monkeys and
measured declarative memory using DNMS task (Zola-Morgan et al.,
1994)

• Humans show greater impairments when there is bilateral damage to


medial temporal cortex and hippocampus (Rempel-Clower et al., 1996)
…not just the hippocampus!
Mammillary bodies
Patient N.A.
• Anterograde amnesia
• Limbic system structures that have connections to the hippocampus
• Dorsal medial thalamus
• Mammillary bodies
• Could gain new nondeclarative (procedural) memories
• Normal STM
• Issue forming declarative long-term memories

• Due to similarity in symptoms, it suggests that they are part of a wider


‘memory system’
Korsakoff’s syndrome
• Degenerative disease affecting limbic system due to thiamine deficiency
• But not hippocampus
• Processing system
• Connecting medial temp. lobes to thalamus and then to other cortical areas
• Lack a sense of familiarity
• Confabulate
• Likely frontal lobe damage

• Conclusion: hippocampus, mammillary bodies and thalamus needed for


NEW memories
• So, what about ‘OLD’ memories
• Research from brain damaged patients has revealed a further
important distinction within declarative memory
• Episodic
• Semantic
• Patient KC
• Poor episodic memory but intact semantic
Skill acquisition
• Process of learning a new challenging task by repetition
• What skills have you got?
• Ride a bike?
• Juggle?
• Sensorimotor
• Perceptual
• Cognitive
• Basal ganglia
• Motor cortex and cerebellum
Types of learning
• Associative learning – relations between events
• Cerebellum (eye blink conditioning)
• Humans - Logan and Grafton (1995)
• Cerebellum unilateral lesions (Papka et al., 1994)

• Instrumental conditioning – operant conditioning (skinners box)


• Unable to pinpoint brain areas crucial for this…

• Cognitive maps – understanding of relative spatial organization of


objects & information)
Spatial learning
• Hippocampus is crucial
• Selectively specialised cells
that encode for spatial
location (O’Keefe & Dostrovsky,
1971)
• New place? New map! (Moita et
al., 2004)
• Birds that hide food show
larger hippocampi than those
that don’t (Krebs et al., 1989)
Hippocampal place cells
(O’keefe & Nadel, 1978)
• 10 place cells (rat hippocampus CA1) recorded simultaneously over 50
minutes of foraging
Comparative context
• Bats

• Squirrels

• Elephants
Place cells and episodic memory
Miller et al. (2013)
• Links these two by means of the event's spatial context
• Close to 26 percent of the recorded cells were classified as place-cells
(95 of 371)
• hippocampus, amygdala, entorhinal cortex and anterior MTL
• These findings demonstrate that place-cells show similar patterns of
activity for traveling through locations in space as for memory recall
related to those locations
• Rats: place cells fire corresponding to paths/routes being considered
prior to decision (Johnson & Redish, 2007)
Learning – brain plasticity
• Changes in synapses are argued to be the basis of learning
• Presynaptic, post or both
• Amount of neurotransmitter releases
• Changes to the number/sensitivity of receptors
• Inhibiting inactivation of neurotransmitters (e.g., altering reuptake)
• Inputs from other neurons
• Extra depolarisation/hyperpolarisation of axon terminals and thus neurotransmitter
release
• New synapses can from, others can die back
Reminder:
Long-term potentiation
• Increase in effectiveness of synapses following repeated strong
stimulation
Excitatory post-
synaptic potential
(EPSP) increases
markedly
Molecular/physiology of memory
• 3 pathways in the
hippocampal
formation display LTP
• Excitatory
neurotransmitter
glutamate
• Receptor: NMDA
receptor
• Drugs that block these
receptors prevent new
LTP
Support for LTP as a mechanism for
memory formation…
• Knockout mice – hippocampi are incapable of LTP and have impaired
declarative memory (Rampon et al., 2000)

• Gene altered mice to overexpress NMDA receptors have enhanced


LTP and better than average LTM (Tang et al., 2001)

• Behavioural LTP studies (Whitlock et al., 2006)


H.M…
• Loss of hippocampal mechanisms like LTP to consolidate STM into
LTM?
• Such tiny microscopic changes have such an impact on human life…
Research
— THE BR
AIN OBSE
RVATORY
®

You might also like