Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
STORAGE: RETAINING INFORMATION *Fun Facts* *The current world record for memorizing digits of pi is held by Chao Lu of China, who memorized 67,890 digits! *Dominic O’Brien of Great Britain memorized 54 decks of cards, totaling 2,808 cards - a world record! *Ben Pridmore of Great Britain, memorized 96 historical dates in 5 minutes. He also set the world record of memorizing a single shuffled deck of cards in 26 seconds. Sensory Memory • Iconic Memory: a momentary sensory memory of visual stimuli; a photographic or picture-image memory lasting no more than a few tenths of a second; we all have a fleeting photographic memory *for a few tenths of a second, our eyes register an exact representation of a scene & we can recall any part of it in amazing detail…but it clears quickly from our visual screen as new images are coming in… • Echoic Memory: a momentary sensory memory of auditory stimuli; if attention is elsewhere, sounds & words can still be recalled within 3 or 4 seconds *ie: attention strays in class to the weekend, teacher asks “What did I just say?” you can recover the teacher’s last few words for about 3-4sec. Working/Short-Term Memory What are the duration & capacity of short-term & of long-term memory? • Short term memory is limited not only in duration but also in capacity, typically storing about seven bits of info (+/- 2) • George Miller (1956) enshrined this recall capacity as the Magical Number Seven, plus or minus two • Both kids & adults have short-term recall for roughly as many words as they can speak in 2s * At any given moment, we can consciously process only a very limited amount of info. Long-Term Memory • Even though our capacity for storing long-term memories is limitless, memory is not a recording of events. • Stored memories are interfered with by attention issues, prior knowledge & memory decay…BUT old memories are not replaced by new memories! *Psychologist Rajan Mahadevan could repeat 50 random digits backward; given a block of 10 digits from the first 30,000 or so digits of pi, Rajan, after a few moments of mental searching would pick up the series from there…firing #s like a machine gun. -He says it is not a genetic gift, anyone could learn to do it…{his dad memorized Shakespeare’s complete works!!! } • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yp9qFSjJZk • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TRD40 Sidevs How does the brain store our memories? • Psychologist Karl Lashley (1950) demonstrated that memories do not reside in single, specific locations. -He trained rats to find way out of maze then cut out pieces of cortexes & retested their memory -No matter which small brain section he removed, rats retained at least a partial memory of how to navigate maze …Storing Memories (cont’d) • Synaptic Changes: -Contemporary memory researchers have searched for a memory trace – the quest to understand the physical basis of memory – for how info becomes incarnated in matter – has sparked study of the synaptic meeting places where neurons communicate with one another via their NT messengers. -We do know that experience modifies brain’s neural networks; increased activity = new neural connections forming or strengthened …cont’d • So far…the only evidence to confirm a physical basis for memory is long-term potentiation (LTP): an increase in a synapse’s firing potential after brief, rapid stimulation. -In experiments, rapidly stimulating certain memory-circuit connections has increased their sensitivity for hours or even weeks… *Evidence that LTP is a physical basis for memory: 1. Drugs that block LTP interfere with learning(Lynch & Stabuli, 1991) 2. Mutant mice engineered to lack an enzyme needed for LTP can’t learn their way out of a maze (Silva et al., 1992) 3. Rats given drug that enhances LTP will learn a maze with ½ the usual number of mistakes (Service, 1994) 4. Injecting rats with a chemical that blocks the preservation of LTP erases recent learning (Pastalkova et al., 2006) So What? • Memory-biology explorers have helped to develop & test memory-boosting drugs; target market = Alzheimer’s patients, mild cognitive impairment that becomes Alzheimer’s, and others who’d like to stop progression of age-related memory loss. • One approach…developing drugs that boost production of protein CREB which might lead to increased production of proteins that help reshape synapses & consolidate STM into LTM. {sea slugs, mice & fruit flies w/ enhanced CREB have shown enhanced memories} • Another approach…developing drugs that boost glutamate, a NT that enhances synaptic communication (LTP). Stress Hormones & Memory • When excited/stressed, emotion-triggered stress hormones make more glucose energy available to fuel brain activity, signaling the brain that something important has happened. • The amygdala (two emotion-processing clusters in limbic Sx) boosts activity & avail. Proteins in the brain’s memory forming areas • Result? Arousal can sear certain events into brain. “Stronger emotional experiences make for stronger, more reliable memories) • Flashbulb Memory: a clear memory of an emotionally significant moment/event. -i.e.:first kiss, whereabouts when learning of friend’s death, 9/11… -It’s as if your brain says, “Capture this!” -Usually extremely accurate…unless people relive, rehearse & discuss the memory & then misinformation can seep into them. -Limits to stress-enhanced remembering: when prolonged (abuse/combat) stress acts corrodes neural connections & shrinks the hippocampus (vital for laying down new memories). -Sudden stress hormones may also block older memories…mind goes blank when making class presentation Ok…now your turn… Turn to your text pg. 271. Start reading at Storing Implicit & Explicit Memories & STOP after you’ve read to the middle of pg.274. Take READING NOTES!!!! {amnesia, H.M., implicit/explicit memory, hippocampus, cerebellum}