Learning and Memory (neuro) Flashcards
1
Q
Types of memory
A
- Learning: acquisition of new information
- Memory: retention of learned information
- Declarative memory (explicit):
• Facts and events - hippocampus - Nondeclarative memory (implicit):
• Procedural memory - motor skills, habits - striatum
2
Q
Types of memory
A
- Declarative memory (medial temporal lobe; diencephalon): • facts • events - Nondeclarative memory: • procedural memory (skills and habits, striatum) • classical conditioning: - skeletal musculature (cerebellum) - emotional responses (amygdala)
3
Q
Types of declarative memory
A
- Working memory:
• Temporary storage, lasting seconds - Short-term memories - vulnerable to disruption:
• Facts and events stored in short-term memory
• Subset are converted to long-term memories. - Long-term memories:
• Recalled months or years later - memory consolidation: process of converting short term to long term memories
4
Q
Prefrontal cortex and working memory
A
- Primates have a large frontal lobe.
- Functions of prefrontal cortex: self-awareness, capacity
for planning and problem solving - Other brain regions are involved, for example lateral
intraparietal cortex neuron response in delayed- saccade task
5
Q
Where are memories stored?
A
- The engram.
- Hebb’s Cell Assembly and Memory Storage
6
Q
Consolidation
A
- involvement of the medial temporal lobes
7
Q
Information flows through the medial temporal lobe
A
sensory information -> cortical association areas -> parahippocampal and rhinal cortical areas -> hippocampus -> fornix -> thalamus/hypothalamus
8
Q
Amnesia
A
- serious loss of memory and/or ability to learn
- causes: concussion, chronic alcoholism, encephalitis,
brain tumor, stroke
9
Q
Henry Gustav Molaison
A
- known as HM to neuroscientists
- Feb 26, 1926 - Dec 2 2008
- Had a bicycle accident at the age 9.
- Developed epilepsy (had seizures)
- In 1953 was referred to William Scoville at Hartford Hospital.
- Scoville localised the epilepsy to the right and left medial temporal lobes (MTL) of HM’s brain and removed parts of the right and left MTLs.
- The surgery was effective in reducing occurrence of seizures. However, it had a devastating side effect
- HM lost the ability to form new long-term memories but remembered events before the surgery.
- He was, however, able to learn new motor skills (although he didn’t remember learning them)
10
Q
Spatial memory and place cells
A
- Learning Morris water maze requires hippocampus.
- Place cells fire when animal is in a specific place.
- Place fields dynamic
11
Q
Two models of memory consolidation
A
- Standard model of memory consolidation:
• Information from neocortex areas associated with sensory systems sent to medial temporal lobe for processing
• Synaptic consolidation, systems consolidation
• Post consolidation, hippocampus not necessary - Multiple trace model of consolidation:
• Hippocampal involvement is continued
• Multiple memory traces - Dependent upon synaptic plasticity – ‘the biological process by which specific patterns of synaptic activity result in changes in synaptic strength’
12
Q
Trisynaptic circuit
A
- The changes in neuronal response can be explained by synaptic plasticity.
- The trisynaptic circuit of the hippocampus is often used in studies of this phenomenon
- Trisynaptic circuit:
• Information flows from entorhinal cortex, via performant path to the dentate gyrus
• Mossy fibres originate from dentate gyrus and synapse upon pyramidal neurons in CA3 hippocampal region
• Axons from CA3 (Schaffer collaterals) synapse upon pyramidal neurons in CA1 hippocampal region
13
Q
Mechanisms of LTP in CA
A
- Glutamate receptors mediate excitatory synaptic transmission.
- NMDA receptors and AMPA receptors