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Human Anatomy & Physiology Ninth Edition CHAPTER 7/2/2012 © Annie Leibovitz/Contact Press Images MDufilho 12 The Central Nervous System 2: Sleep and Memory 1 © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Sleep and Sleep-Wake Cycles • State of partial unconsciousness from which person can be aroused by stimulation • Two major types of sleep (defined by EEG patterns) – Non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep – Rapid eye movement (REM) sleep 7/2/2012 MDufilho 2 Figure 12.19a Types and stages of sleep. Awake REM: Skeletal muscles (except ocular muscles and diaphragm) are actively inhibited; most dreaming occurs. NREM stage 1: Relaxation begins; EEG shows alpha waves; arousal is easy. NREM stage 2: Irregular EEG with sleep spindles (short highamplitude bursts); arousal is more difficult. NREM stage 3: Sleep deepens; theta and delta waves appear; vital signs decline. 7/2/2012 Typical EEG patterns MDufilho NREM stage 4: EEG is dominated by delta waves; arousal is difficult; bed-wetting, night terrors, and sleepwalking may occur. 3 Sleep Patterns • Alternating cycles of sleep and wakefulness reflect natural circadian (24hour) rhythm • RAS activity inhibited during, but RAS also mediates sleep stages • Suprachiasmatic and preoptic nuclei of hypothalamus time sleep cycle • Typical sleep pattern alternates between REM and NREM sleep 7/2/2012 MDufilho 4 Figure 12.19b Types and stages of sleep. Awake REM Stage 1 NREM Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4 4 5 7 3 6 Time (hrs) Typical progression of an adult through one night’s sleep stages 1 7/2/2012 MDufilho 2 5 Sleep Disorders • Narcolepsy - Abrupt lapse into sleep from awake state – Treatment • Insomnia - Chronic inability to obtain amount or quality of sleep needed – Treatment • Sleep apnea - Temporary cessation of breathing during sleep – Causes hypoxia 7/2/2012 MDufilho 6 Memory • Storage and retrieval of information • Two stages of storage – Short-term memory (STM, or working memory)—temporary holding of information; limited to seven or eight pieces of information – Long-term memory (LTM) has limitless capacity 7/2/2012 MDufilho 7 Figure 12.20 Memory processing. Outside stimuli General and special sensory receptors Afferent inputs Temporary storage (buffer) in cerebral cortex Data permanently lost Data selected for transfer Automatic memory Short-term memory (STM) Forget Forget Data transfer influenced by: Retrieval Excitement Rehearsal Associating new data with stored data Long-term memory (LTM) 7/2/2012 MDufilho Data unretrievable 8 Transfer from STM to LTM • Factors affecting transfer from STM to LTM – Emotional state—best if alert, motivated, surprised, and aroused – Rehearsal—repetition and practice – Association—tying new information with old memories – Automatic memory—subconscious information stored in LTM 7/2/2012 MDufilho 9 Brain Video • Shows role of hippocampus in short-term and long-term memory • Shows physiology of chemical synapse 7/2/2012 10 MDufilho Categories of Memory 1. Declarative (fact) memory – Explicit information – Related to conscious thoughts and language ability – Stored in LTM with context in which learned 7/2/2012 MDufilho 11 Categories of Memory 2. Nondeclarative memory – – – – 7/2/2012 Less conscious or unconscious Acquired through experience and repetition Best remembered by doing; hard to unlearn Includes procedural (skills) memory, motor memory, and emotional memory MDufilho 12 Figure 12.21a Proposed memory circuits. Sensory input Thalamus Thalamus Basal forebrain Touch Prefrontal cortex Hearing Taste Vision Smell Association cortex Medial temporal lobe (hippocampus, etc.) Prefrontal cortex ACh released by basal forebrain Hippocampus Declarative memory circuits 7/2/2012 MDufilho 13 Figure 12.21b Proposed memory circuits. Premotor cortex Sensory and motor inputs Association cortex Basal nuclei Thalamus Premotor cortex Dopamine released by substantia nigra Basal nuclei Thalamus Substantia nigra Procedural (skills) memory circuits 7/2/2012 MDufilho 14 Molecular Basis of Memory • During learning: – Neuronal RNA altered; newly synthesized mRNA moved to axons and dendrites – Dendritic spines change shape – Extracellular proteins deposited at synapses involved in LTM – Number and size of presynaptic terminals may increase – Presynaptic neurons release more neurotransmitter 7/2/2012 MDufilho 15 Molecular Basis of Memory • Long-term potentiation (LTP) – Increase in synaptic strength crucial • Neurotransmitter (glutamate) binds to NMDA receptors, opening calcium channels in postsynaptic terminal – Calcium influx activates enzymes to • Modifies proteins in pre and postsynaptic terminals– this strengthens response to the next stimuli • Activate genes in postsynaptic neuron to produce new synaptic proteins 7/2/2012 MDufilho 16