What is learning?
An inferred change in an organism’s mental state which results from experience, and which influences in a relatively permanent fashion and organism’s potential for subsequent adaptive behavior
List the Order of Memory (6)
Explain Sensory Memory
Explain Short term/Working Memory
Explain Encoding/Consolidation
Hippocampus “amplifies” memory and send to corties
Explain Long Term Memory
Declarative further breaks down into episodic and semantic memory
Explain Retrieval
Bringing back memories from long-term memory back into short-term/working memory
What is phylogenetic/epigenetic memory?
What is behavioral memory?
Who was patient H.M? What were the outcomes of studying him?
What is explicit memory?
Deliberate recall of information that one recognizes as a memory
A division of Long-term memory
Declarative
What is implicit memory?
the influence of recent experience on behavior without realizing one is using a memory
A division of Long-term memory
What is Declarative memory?
the ability to state a memory into words
Explicit Memory
What is episodic memory?
Ability to recall single events
A division of Declarative memory
H.M. had difficulty with episodic and declarative memory
What is semantic memory?
Definitions and symbolism
A division of Declarative memory
What is procedural (non-declarative) memory?
ability to develop motor skills = remembering or learning how to do things
Implicit Memory
H.M.’s procedural memory remained intact
What is Hebbian learning (4)?
What is habituation?
a decrease in response to a stimulus that is presented repeatedly and accompanied by no change in other stimuli
What is sensitization?
an increase in response to a mild stimulus as a result of previous exposure to more intense stimuli
How does sensitization occur (2)?
When does long-term potentiation occur?
when one or more axons bombard a dendrite with stimulation.
Leaves the synapse “potentiated” for a period of time and the neuron is more responsive to any stimulus
What is long-term depression (LTD)?
a prolonged decrease in response at a synapse that occurs when axons have been active at a low frequency
The opposite of LTP
What are the properties of LTP (3)?
Explain mechanism of Early LTP