---memory consolidation--- Flashcards
hippocampus
- key area of brain for LTM
- Removed in patient H.M.
- Destroyed in Clive Wearing
medial temporal lobe
- key area of brain for LTM
- The STM and LTM capacities intact for Patient H.M. (and others)
- The MTL thought to perform some role – but this role is not fully understood
neocortex
- key area of the brain for LTM
- Higher brain functions (i.e. perception, emotion, cognition)
- Consolidated memories (not reliant upon the hippocampus) argued to be located in the neocortex
retrograde amnesia
The temporal gradient of retrograde amnesia and the link to hippocampus damage led to theories about how memories might be consolidated.
consolidation
- Is the process in the brain that makes the memory for an event enduring.
- It refers to the process of information being transferred from one region of the brain to another and gradual re-organisation of brain regions to support memory.
- Maybe recent memories (before incident) are less consolidated.
as time passes, what we have learned and experienced (new memories) can be gradually re-organised within the brain.
temporally graded retrograde amnesia
is often examined to better understand memory consolidation.
hippocampal consolidation
- Initial encoding of new information into the hippocampus.
- Rapid process
The hippocampus acts as a temporary memory and also then facilitates communication between different sites in the cortex to enable a cortical trace to be established that supports the memory.
The interaction between the hippocampus and (neo)cortical regions is therefore crucial in supporting the formation of memories.
systems consolidation
- Transferring information from the hippocampus to other brain regions for long term storage.
- This process takes much more time!
• Alternate view: Nadal & Moscovitch (1997, 1998) – Multiple Trace Theory.
- Consolidation is important but so is RETRIEVAL.
- Consolidation processes create multiple traces of a memory in the brain.
- More memory traces are made (when activated via memory retreival) rather than the trace being more established over time
- Damage to the hippocampus removes some of these traces, and as newer memories have fewer traces, this creates the temporal gradient.