Learning and memory Flashcards
What are the 2 categories of long-term memory
Declarative and non-declarative
What are the 2 categories of declarative memory?
Episodic - memory for events
Semantic - memory for facts
What are the 4 categories of non-declarative memory?
- Procedural
- Priming and perceptual learning
- Non-associative learning
- Classical conditioning
Define priming
Improvement in identifying/processing stimulus after having observed it previously
Define classical conditioning
previously neutral stimulus (CS) paired with another stimulus (US) then provokes response (UR)
What is non-associative learning
Learning that does not involve the association of two stimuli to produce a behavioural response
- Habituation
- Sensitisation (opposite of habituation)
What is often associated with deficits in episodic memory?
MCI prior to Alzheimer’s disease, Huntington’s disease, chemotherapy and treatment for depression
What area of the brain is most associated with episodic memory?
The hippocampus
How do scrub-jays show episodic-like memory?
Remember when and where they cached food - will retrieve waxworms first but only if stored a short time ago
Why are bird brains often a bad model?
- Very different brains to mammalian brains - hard to adopt homologous approach
- Little known about bird brains and behaviour
What have experiments shown of rat episodic memory?
Will remember what and where they stored, but not when. They will prefer cheese regardless of 1h or 25h interval
What have object experiments shown in rats?
Explore objects that were unfamiliar more, and familiar objects within new environments which shows a memory for what, where and which (episodic like?)
What is the chemistry of Long Term Potentiation (LTP)?
- NMDA receptors allow Ca2+ into the cell once activated
- Ca2+ sets in motion cascade where more AMPA receptors are inserted into the post-synaptic membrane
- Stronger response to stimulation from the presynaptic cell
What 3 things are needed for long-lasting memory?
- Short term LTP
- Chemical tag at synapse to attract proteins
- Proteins stabilise changes induced by LTP
Define spatial memory
Map-like cognitive representation of familiar environments, an element of episodic memory but can also be spatial semantic memory