What is the difference between learning and memory?
LEARNING: acquisition of new information
MEMORY: retention of learned information
What are the different types of memory?
DECLARATIVE MEMORY (EXPLICIT): facts and events [hippocampus]
NON-DECLARATIVE MEMORY (IMPLICIT): procedural memory (motor skills, habits) [striatum]
What are the different types of declarative and non-declarative memory?
Declarative memory involves the medial temporal lobe and the diencephalon, and stores:
Non-declarative memory stores:
What are the different types of declarative memory?
WORKING MEMORY:
- temporary storage, lasting seconds
SHORT-TERM MEMORIES:
LONG-TERM MEMORIES:
- recalled months or years later
What is memory consolidation?
It is the process of converting short-term memories to long-term memories.
It involves the medial temporal lobes.
What part of the brain is involved in working memory?
The prefrontal cortex is involved with working memory.
Other brain regions are involved, for example, the lateral intraparietal cortex neuron response in the delayed-saccade task.
How does the size of the prefrontal cortex affect working memory?
Because the prefrontal cortex is relatively large, it allows for greater capacity for higher-level thinking and bringing in working memory, allowing for:
Where is memory stored?
Memory is stored in the engram, which is a collection of neurons that, when they act together, store a memory.
Which brain region is involved in memory consolidation?
medial temporal lobes
-hippocampus
Hebb’s cell assembly and memory storage
Presentation of an external stimulus resulted in the activation of a cell assembly, which is a group of interconnected neurones firing together
Collective firing causes reverberating electrical circuits within the neurones, continuing electrical activity even after the stimulus is removed
Causes Hebbian modification of circuits, resulting in strengthening of connections between the neurones that are active at the same time
The strengthened connections of the cell assembly contain the engram for the stimulus
After learning, only partial activation of the assembly leads to activation of the entire representation of the stimulus
Describe information flow through the medial temporal lobe.
We get sensory information coming in to our cortical association areas. This send the information through to the parahippocampal and rhinal cortical areas. This finally gets forwarded to the hippocampus.
Via the fornix, the information is sent to the thalamus and the hypothalamus. The hippocampus also relays back to the cortical association areas.
Hippocampus role in memory
involved in processing long-term memory:
What is amnesia?
Causes of amnesia?
Amnesia is the serious loss of memory and/or ability to learn.
CAUSES: concussion, chronic alcoholism, encephalitis, brain tumour, stroke
Retrograde amnesia
Anterograde amnesia
Retrograde amnesia
Anterograde amnesia
Spatial memory
Which brain region is important for spatial memory?
What can disrupt spatial memory?
ability to navigate yourself safely around somewhere
hippocampus
lesioned hippocampus
pharmacologically blocking hippocampus
Place cells
neurones in the hippocampus that fire when the animal occupies a specific location within its environment
-can be used to process spatial information
Studying spatial memory in animals
Morris water maze:
Models of memory consolidation
Standard Model of Memory Consolidation
Multiple Trace Model of Memory Consolidation
Standard Model of Memory Consolidation
MULTIPLE TRACE MODEL OF CONSOLIDATION:
- there are multiple memory traces
What are the models of memory consolidation dependent upon?
synaptic plasticity = the ability of synapses to strengthen or weaken over time, in response to increases or decreases in their activity
Describe the relationship between spatial memory and place cells.
Via animals learning the Morris water maze, we know that learning to do with spatial memory requires the hippocampus.
The place cells will fire when the animal is in a specific place. The place fields are dynamic.
Describe the model of distributed memory.
particular memories are spread across neurones
It can also explain when, when we lose some neurons, we don’t necessarily lose all our memories associated with the neurons, as there are others with the information stored.
Trisynaptic circuit of the hippocampus
The trisynaptic circuit is a neural circuit in the hippocampus, which is made up of: