Title: Memory
1Memory
- Chris Rorden
- Anterograde Amnesia
- Short vs Long Term Memory
- Episodic vs Procedural Memory
- Confabulation
www.mricro.com
2HM
- Severe epilepsy, treated with surgery to
bilaterally remove medial temporal lobes. - Operation 9/1953, 27 years old
- Tested 4/1955, age 29
- Reported date as 3/1953, age of 27
- No memories since operation
- IQ better than pre-op (112)
- Fewer seizures
- Profound failure to create new memories
- Cant find new home (after 10 mos.)
- Cant remember new people, names, tasks
3HM
- Deficits
- Complete loss of episodic memory
- Events/People since operation
- Location of new home
- Rey figure copy but not recalled
- Semantic memory
- Language essentially frozen in 50s (Gabrieli et
al. 1988) - Exceptions ayatollah, rock n roll
4HM severe anterograde amnesia
- Anterograde amnesia since lesion
- Suggests encoding deficit
- Retrograde amnesia prior to lesion
anterograde
retrograde
Memory
1/9/1953
1945
1950
1955
5HM working memory
- Intact working memory
- Normal digit span (remembering numbers)
- Wickelgren (1968) showed rate of forgetting
within normal range - Unless interrupted (constant rehearsal)
6HM procedural memory
- Intact procedural memory
- Can learn new motor tasks
- Mirror tracing task (Milner 1962, 1965)
- Pursuit rotor tracing (Corkin, 1968)
- Implicitly familiar w testing equipment
- Anterograde amnesics can learn new piano pieces
(Starr Phillips, 1970)
7HM implicit memory
- Perhaps procedural tasks tap implicit memory
HM has deficit of explicit memory - Milner et al (1968) showed HM learned Gollin
incomplete picture task
8HM implicit memory
- HM has also implicitly learned Tower of Hanoi
game (Cohen, 1984). - Can not remember playing, but solves quickly.
Start Position
Goal 2 (2 moves)
Goal 10 (5 moves)
9Memento Amnesia in Film Noir
10HM
- Temporally graded retrograde amnesia
- Old memories (childhood) OK
- Memories immediately before lesion lost
- Forgot death of favourite uncle in 1950
- Suggests consolidation takes time
Memory
1/9/1953
1945
1950
1955
11How long does consolidation require?
- Testing retrograde amnesia.
- HM photos of celebrities suggest retrograde
amnesia spans decades, with more distant memories
relatively preserved (Marslen-Wilson Teuber,
1975) - PZ Butters Cermak (1986)
- Wrote autobiography
- Test personal memories
12Medial Temporal Lobe Memory
- MTL patients
- Short term memory intact
- Old long term memory intact
- Suggests consolidation deficit
- Encoding deficit, retrieval intact
- See Warrington Weiskrantz for alternate view
- Unable to create new LTM
- LTM formation requires years?
13Anatomy
- Anterograde amnesia follows damage to medial
temporal lobe or connected regions. - MTL or diencephalic structures like thalamus and
mamillary bodies - E.G. NA had fencing foil in nose
- Accident in 1960
- Diencephalic damage
- Similar to HM, though less retrograde
14Anterograde Amnesia
- Similar deficits with damage anywhere in Papez
circuit.
Fornix (Squires Patient) Mammillary
body (Korsakoff Patients)
Hippocampal formation - HM
15Hippocampus (T1 MRI)
- Folded shape seen in coronal image.
- Here healthy individual
16HMs lesion
- Surgeon report describes removal of entire
hippocampus (Scoville Milner, 1957). - Recent MRI (Corkin et al., 1997) study suggests
posterior hippocampus is present (though
atrophied).
Scoville Milner 1957
Corkin et al. 1997
17HMs lesion
- Corkin et al. (1997)
- bilaterally symmetrical
- medial temporal pole
- most of the amygdaloid complex
- most or all of the entorhinal cortex
- anterior half of hippocampal formation (dentate
gyrus, hippocampus, and subicular complex)
18Memory primacy and recency
- People often remember the first few and last few
items in long lists - First words primacy most rehearsal
- Final words recency least interference
- Clearly easier you do not have to remember as
long - These are thought to reflect different processes
recall
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Item Number
19Amnesics show no primacy effect
- Patients like HM remember last few words (when
not interrupted) - Recency effect intact
- Primacy effect gone no encoding benefit
recall
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Item Number
20Memory
- Are primacy and recency effects different
processes - Maybe recency is simply easier
- Evidence would come from patients who show an
opposite pattern of effects - Primacy intact
- Recency impaired
- These patients would provide a double
dissociation
21Primacy and recency
- Short term (working) memory
Long term memory
recall
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Item Number
22Patient KF
- Shallice Warrington (1970)
- Primacy effect intact
- Recency effect impaired
- Complements amnesic patients
recall
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Item Number
23Potential Paradox
Can information get into long term memory if
there is no short term memory?
Long term memory
recall
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Item Number
24Does LTM require STM?
- According to Atkinson Shiffrin (1968)
- STM rehearsal leads to LTM
- Predicts that LTM will depends on STM
- Can not accommodate Shallice and Warringtons
patient
Sensory (iconic) Memory
Short Term Memory
Long Term Memory
25Shallice Warrington (1970)
- S W suggest that short term and long term
memory independent from each other. - Short term memory not required for long term
memory - Very controversial model
26Baddeley working memory
- STM is encoded by system dedicated to input
- Verbal info phonological loop
- Visual info visuo-spatial scratchpad
- LTM is more modality independent
Phonological Loop
Visuo-Spatial Scratch pad
Phonological Loop
Long Term Memory
27A Implicit vs explicit memory
- MTL amnesics
- Explicit memory unable to create
- Implicit memory relatively intact
- So far single dissociation
- 2 possibilities
- Implicit/Explicit 2 independent systems
- Implicit simply easier, relies on residual
processing of a single, partially damaged system - Double dissociation would support claim of 2
independent systems
28B Gabrieli et al. (1995)
- Patient MS
- 29 year old, right handed male
- Intractable epilepsy surgery removed right BA
17,18, part of 19. - Hemianopic (blind in left field)
- Compared to MTL amnesics and healthy controls.
29C Results
- Explicit memory task
- Shown 24 words, later shown 48 words (24 from 1st
phase, 24 new foils) asked to say if words were
previously seen. - Amnesics poor.
- MS fine.
30D Conclusion
- Implicit memory word completion task
- Shown/Heard 24 words stick, later asked to
complete 48 stems, 24 could be solved with items
from 1st phase (sti__) and 24 unrelated stems
(sta__). - Healthy people show priming effect (faster if
solution seen previously). This effect is much
bigger if words were seen (physical match) rather
than heard. - Amensics show normal priming. Shows implicit
memory. - MS visual priming is no greater than auditory
priming. Therefore, shows no extra benefit for
physical match of stem and previously seen word.
Conclusion Double dissociation Explicit memory
has some distinct processing from implicit
memory. Conceptual priming intact in MS,
perceptual priming damaged
31Recollection vs Familiarity Memory
- Is implicit memory really preserved in MTL
amnesics? - Explicit tasks usually much harder
- Explicit Recall What was the picture I showed
you earlier? Could have thousands of answers. - Implicit Recognition Which of these two
pictures did I show you only has two answers,
and seeing the correct answer may jog memory. - Is this a meaningful dissociation? (see Simons
Spiers, 2003) - Jon and YR have intact Recognition, but impaired
recall - Selective lesions to only hippocampus or fornix
- LG and PH have poor Recognition, even poorer
recall - Damage to hippocampus and surrounding
parahippocampal regions - Both groups show same pattern
- Not a double dissociation
- Harder task impaired for everyone
32Recollection vs Familiarity Memory
- Yonelinas et al. (2002) compare hypoxic patients
(H, focal bilateral damage to hippocampus) to
patients with unilateral but extensive damage to
the hippocampus and surrounding tissue (H) and
controls (C). - For H group, recall correlated with recognition
(below, left) - Interaction between groups
- H poorer at familiarity (poor implicit)
- H poorer at recollection (poor explicit)
- Suggests Double dissociation is real
33Semantic vs. episodic memory
- HM has impaired semantic and episodic memory
- Semantic Language frozen in 1950s (Gabrieli et
al.) - Episodic poor at remembering events.
- However, his lesions damage both hippocampus and
surrounding temporal lobe. - What about patients with more selective damage?
34A Graham et al. 2000
- Graham et al. suggest double dissociation
- Early Alzheimer's patients
- Semantic dementia patients
Alzheimers Patient Hippocampus atrophy
Semantic Dementia Temporal lobe atrophy
35B Test stimuli
- A Semantic naming task (phone)
- Correct answer phone.
- Memory tested 30 minutes later
- B Episodic memory task (perceptually identical)
- Correct answer I saw a phone earlier
- C Episodic memory task (perceptually different)
- Correct answer I saw a phone earlier.
36C Semantic naming
- Semantic dementia patients have difficulty naming
items. - AD patients are fine at this task.
37D Episodic memory
- AD patients
- poor episodic memory.
- SD patients
- OK with identical items
- Poor with perceptually different (especially if
unable to name item in picture naming phase).
38E Conclusions
- Suggests semantic and episodic memory may be
separate. - Hippocampal formation encoding episodic memories
- Temporal lobe storage of semantic memories.
- Additional support from Vargha-Khadem (1997), who
reports 4 patients with selective hippocampal
damage all show impaired episodic but intact
semantic memory. - Note all sustained hippocampal damage early in
life, so does not necessarily generalize to adult
brain.
39Memory Prefrontal Cortex (PFC)
- PFC damage results in
- Disinhibition
- Impulsiveness
- Disorganization
- Memory deficits
- Other deficits can hide memory problems
- Less pure than MTL amnesia
- Note oribtofrontal cortex subdivided
- Ventromedial PFC
- Ventrolateral PFC
40Memory structure (Squire Knowlton, 1994)
- Simplified from page 349 of Gazzaniga book
Declarative memory (explicit)
Nondeclarative memory (implicit)
Events (episodic) Experiences particular to
time/place MTL, PFC
Facts (semantic) World/word, language knowledge,
conceptual priming MTL, PFC
Procedural Motor, cognitive skills Basal ganglia,
cerebellum
Perceptual Perceptual priming Association cortex
41Interaction of different brain regions
- Lesions in animals and functional imaging suggest
network of regions work together to encode
memory. - Beyond scope of neuropsychology course.
42Spontaneous confabulation
- Confabulation syndrome
- Spontaneously produce confabulations (no need to
make things up, no external trigger) - Convinced of accuracy of their confabulations
- Acted on confabulations (indication of conviction)
43Double dissociation
- Spontaneous and provoked confabulation
dissociate Schnider et al. (1996), Brain 119,
1365-1375. - Spontaneous confabulation
- Generate false memories without prompting
- Often whole gist of memory is false
- Provoked confabulation, false recognition
- Can be seen in healthy adults
- Accidentally report having seen word earlier in
list if it is similar to previous word - Errors with small details of overall story
44Example of spontaneous confabulator
- 58-year old woman
- Aneurysm of anterior communicating artery.
- Reported needed to go home to feed her baby
- Her baby was 30 years old
45Case 2
- 48 year old tax accountant
- Traumatic damage to orbitofrontal lobe
- Left hospital convinced taxi was waiting to take
him to meeting - Consistently thought he had business meeting
46Reflections
- Ideas tend to be internally consistent but
inaccurate. - Careful testing shows they are disoriented,
confuse date and time. - When confronted, often search for explanations
but fail to adapt their ideas - Patient in Berne convinced he was in Bordeaux.
- Admitted view from window inconsistent with
belief. - Did not change belief.
47- Most confabulations about present
- Plausible
- Traced to actual events
- Usually accurate regarding old memories
- Majority eventually stop confabulating despite
permanent brain injury
48Eliciting confabulations
- Individual is asked if they saw an image before
earlier in run. - Do not report having seen image if you only saw
it in a previous run.
49Eliciting confabulations
- Both amnesics and confabulators do poorly at
remembering if they have seen an item before. - Amnesics forget previously seen items.
- Confabulators report having seen an image from
previous set in current set. - Problem with context, not recognition per se.
50Anatomy of confabulations
- Patients who spontaneously confabulate tend to
have orbitofrontal damage (aka damage to the
ventromedial PFC).