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Neuroscience 19b – Memory Anil Chopra 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Outline the main differences between sensory, working and long-term memory Give an account of working memory Describe the structure of long-term memory Explain different types of amnesia Appreciate that patients forget much of what doctors say to them Memory involves a number of different stages: - Registration: Information input from senses - Encoding: processing and combining of that information - Storage: Holding that information in the memory system. (not everything that is registered and encoded is stored) - Retrieval: Recovering stored information from the memory system. (not everything that is stored can be retrieved). There are different types of memory store, each with its own performance characteristic, function and neuroanatomical position. They are classified in different ways: Durations of Memory Retention Sensory Memory: gives us information on what is happening around us – can include iconic (visual) or echoic (sound) information. It only lasts for a very short time (2 seconds) after which is either forgotten or encoded into a different type of memory. It’s written over by subsequent perceptual information. Short term Memory: or working memory. It is limited by its amount rather than its time. Things are remembered more easily when they are split into chunks. Subsequent information also causes old information to be pushed out, but rehearsal can maintain the information. The frontal cortex, parietal cortex, anterior cingulate, and parts of the basal ganglia are crucial for functioning. The serial position effect shows that recall accuracy depends on the position of an object in a list. Probability of recall 1.0 Phonological Loop Central Executive Primacy Effect Components of Working Memory The central executive is the attentional control and manipulation of information within short term memory which suppressed the irrelevant information and co-ordinates VisuoSpatial Sketchpad Recency Effect 0.5 Episodic Buffer 0 Early Middle Order of items Late cognitive processes when more than one task needs to be done at the same time. This relays information to and from the visiospatial sketchpad and the phonological loop. - Visiospatial sketchpad: stores visual and spatial information. Used in constructing images and mental maps. - Phonological loop: storage of sounds and prevents decay by articulating its contents. - Episodic buffer: this has links with long-term memory and is associated with linking visual, spatial, and phonological information. Long term memory: storage for information not currently in use but possibly used in the future. It can hold an unlimited amount of information and allow information about the past to be used in the present. Retrieval from long term memory may be: Implicit/Non-declarative (unconscious) - knowing how. Also known as procedural. Familiarity and knowledge of how to interact with an object or a situation without having to think about it. e.g. walking, eating. Explicit/Declarative (conscious) i.e. knowing that. Our store of knowledge. There are 2 types: Episodic: relating to an experience. “memories” Semantic: relating to facts. “general knowledge” Normally people can recognize more than they can recall and when brain tissue is damaged recall is affected more than recognition is. Distinguishing different Types of Memory Experimental Psychology - e.g. Serial Position Effect Neuropsychology - e.g. brain lesions Functional Imaging - e.g. PET scans, fMRI Why do we forget? Trace decay – i.e. storage failure Substitution – i.e. storage limit Interference – i.e. retrieval failure Can be proactive or retroactive interference Different memory stores forget things for different reasons: » Sensory memory – trace delay » Working memory – trace delay and substitution » Long-term memory – interference Generally people can recognise more information than they can recall Brain injury or disease affects recall more than recognition o Recognition involves matching to a memory trace o Recall always involves memory search and matching Rehearsal Information in Sensory Registers Attention Working Memory Storage Retrieval Information Lost Information Lost Long Term Memory Clinical Conditions Anterograde Amnesia A condition characterised by ongoing difficulty in remembering and taking in new information as a result of brain injury or disease. It generally affects long-term memory rather than working or sensory memory. Retrograde Amnesia A condition characterised by difficulty in remembering events that occurred before the onset of amnesia – recent events are most severely affected. It normally occurs following brain injury and its effects are reversed with time with more distal memories returning first. Post-Traumatic Amnesia A condition caused by brain injury resulting in unconsciousness. It is defined by the time in between the brain injury and return to full consciousness in which patients experience great lucidity and periods of confusion. The length of time patients are in post-traumatic amnesia can give an indication as to the severity of brain injury and the degree of disability. Post traumatic amnesia is very difficult to measure accurately. Transient global Amnesia A condition characterised by repetitive questioning and confusion but no difference personal identity. It can last several hours (4-12hrs) and occurs most commonly in middle-aged of elderly men, sometimes preceded by headache or nausea, a stressful life event, a medical procedure, intense emotion or vigorous exercise. Psychogenic Amnesia Also known as psychogenic fugue/dissociative amnesia, psychogenic amnesia is the repression or forgetting of a traumatic event. There are 2 types: - Global: patient forgets events and personal identity as a result of severe stress. Usually accompanied by depressed mood and frontal lobe dysfunction. - Situation specific: patient forgets stressful lifetime events e.g. sexual abuse, criminal offence. This is possibly due to the implication of amygdaloid circuits which are different from those in normal learning. Confabulation A condition characterised by unprovoked pouring of untrue or exaggerated memories which are often bizarre. Can occur as a result of damage to the basal forebrain and frontal lobes, aneurysm, damage to the anterior communicating artery or a thiamine deficiency caused by alcoholism (Kosakoff’s syndrome). It has also been shown to occur in normal patients using a choice blindness experiment. This is when patients are asked to make a choice and then when their incorrect choice is presented to them, they are able to confabulate as to why they made that choice. False Memory Syndrome Similar to confabulation in that patients experience a falsely perceived memory, usually of a traumatic experience. In treatment, a therapist may ask the patient to form a detailed mental image of the event. As this imagery is repeated over multiple treatment sessions, it grows successively more vivid, until the entire memory is "recalled". At this point, some patients strongly maintain its validity even when they are presented with evidence to the contrary. Doctor-Patient Consultation In a consultation, memory for medical information is a prerequisite for good adherence to recommended treatment. A large proportion of information told to patients is forgotten immediately and often, the more that is presented the less is retained. The amount remembered is affected by: - factors relating to the medical professional e.g. terminology used - factors relating to the information e.g. written information is better than oral. - factors relating to the patient e.g. age, clinical condition, education level. o Distress and anxiety is shown to decrease the amount remembered by patients. o Perceived importance of the information has an effect on how much is remembered. E.g. diagnosis is deemed more important than treatment.