What is the critical period?
-the time period in development when the genetically determined patterns of brain circuitry are particularly subject to environmental refinement
What happens to the deprived eye in monocular deprivation?
It loses target space. There is competition with the other eye.
What can you say about the consequences of alternation deprivation?
There will be no binocular cells and therefore no stereopsis
What is the critical period length?
2-4 years
What are the 2 important mechanisms at work in the formation of ocular dominance columns?
What does Hebb’s postulate for learning say?
Coincident activity in pre and postsynaptic elements of a synapse leads to its strengthening (increased efficacy)
What mediates the strengthening of synapses in developing V1?
NMDA-receptor dependent mechanism
What can you say about the NMDA receptor?
It is both a ligand and voltage gated ion channel.
Ligand: glutamate
Voltage gate: Mg++ block of channel af a resting Vm
Once opened, the NMDA channel allows for Ca2+ and Na+ to enter
What does the increase in intracellular Ca++ activate?
2nd messenger systems leading to strengthening of active synapses
Why is NMDA receptor said to be a coincidence detector?
Explain the formation of the corals pattern of connections between weeks 2-13
Where is declarative memory formed?
Medial temporal lobe
Where is non declarative memory (procedural memory) formed?
Cerebellum, basal ganglia
What’s difference between retrograde and anterograde amnesia?
Retro: memory loss for events before the trauma
Antero: inability to form new memories following trauma
What does the hippocampus do?
It is involved in learning and memory, including spatial learning and memory
What is perseveration?
Repetition of choices even when they are incorrect
Wh are the microcircuits of the hippocampus?
What do the Place cells of the CA1 pyramidal neurons serve as?
Output of the hippocampus
What influences the position of place field (place cells)?
External cues: landmarks in chamber
Internal cues: visual cues
Vestibular cues due to self motion
What does navigation require?
A map of space and a compass to tell direction
What are the cells responsible for the “compass”? Where are they located?
Head direction specific cells in the postsubiciculum
What do rats use to code for head direction?
They use internal and external cues
What are the three cells involved in spatial memory? Where are they each located?
What is LTP?
Long Term Potentiation