Title: SenseCam & memory rehabilitation. Georgina Browne, Emm
1SenseCam memory rehabilitation
Georgina Browne, Emma Berry, Narinder
Kapur Steve Hodges, Lyndsay Williams, Gavin
Smyth, James Srinivasan, Alex Butler, Alban
Rrustemi, Ken Wood
2Background
- Cambridge Memory Clinic, Addenbrookes Hospital
3Causes and treatment of memory loss
- Neurodegenerative disease
- Alzheimers disease and Lewy Body dementia can be
treated with medication with limited success - No medical treatment for other dementias
- External memory aids (in theory)
- Acquired brain injury (traumatic and
non-traumatic) - External memory aids (in theory)
4Improving memory with SenseCam
- Different types of memory
- Episodic things you have done (personal
experiences) - Semantic facts and concepts
- Prospective things you intend to do (go
shopping, visit friends, make and keep
appointments) - Almost all memory aids treat prospective memory
5Improving memory with SenseCam
- Episodic memory critical to quality of life
- Forms basis for semantic memories
- Guides actions, creates bonds, builds
self-concept - SenseCam records experiences
- Captures events from patients point of view
- Without conscious thought or intrusion
- Plays back quickly in simple-to-use, easy-to-view
movie - Subsequent viewing of image sequences
- Cues recall so consolidates storage of memories
6Improving memory with SenseCam
- Cambridge Memory Clinic, Addenbrookes Hospital
- 63 year old, well-educated, married woman Mrs B
- Diagnosed with limbic encephalitis in 2002
- Now has marked amnesia
- usually no memory a couple of days after event
7Improving memory with SenseCam
- Goals of patient and husband
- To improve Mrs Bs episodic memory
- To share experiences with each other
- To improve Mrs Bs self-esteem and confidence
8Improving memory with SenseCam
- Study Protocol
- Experimental condition SenseCam used to record
special days (N9) - Control condition written diary used to record
special days (N3) - Baseline condition no memory aid used to help
recall special days (N2) - Information reviewed every 2 days for 2 weeks
- Memory evaluated before each review
9Results
Results
Memory of an event over time
Proportion of event remembered
Days elapsed following event
10Results
Results
Memory of an event over time
Proportion of event remembered
Days elapsed following event
11Results
Results
Memory of an event over time
Proportion of event remembered
Days elapsed following event
12Results
Results
Memory of an event over time
Proportion of event remembered
Days elapsed following event
13Results SenseCam feedback
- Results from patients point of view
- More relaxed socially and less anxious
- Sharing experiences again was a sheer pleasure
- Seeing images brings memories flooding back
- It has enormous potential as a memory aid and
has been a great success for us personally
14Results SenseCam feedback
- Publications
- Berry, E., Kapur, N., Watson, P., Smith, R.,
Williams, L., Wilson, B. (in press). The use of
SenseCam as a pictorial diary to improve
autobiographical memory in a patient with limbic
encephalitis A preliminary report.
Neuropsychological Rehabilitation. - Hodges, S., Williams, L., Berry, E., Izadi, S.,
Srinivasan, J., Butler, A., Smyth, G., Kapur, N.,
Wood, K. SenseCam A retropsective memory aid.
To appear in UbiComp 2006, 8th International
Conference on Ubiquitous Computing, September
17-21, 2006. - Tan, D., Berry, E., Czerwinski, M., Sellen, A.,
Bell, G., Gemmell, J., Hodges, S., Kapur, N.,
Meyers, B., Oliver, N., Robertson, G., Wood, K.
(in press). Supporting human memory with a
personal digital lifetime store. To appear in J.
Teevan W. Jones (Eds.), Readings in Personal
Information Management. Seattle University of
Washington Press.
15Ongoing research MSRC
- SenseCam as an episodic memory aid in patients
with early Alzheimers disease - SenseCam as an episodic memory aid in other
patients with memory loss - SenseCam factors facilitating consolidation
- Image-reviewing schedules
16Ongoing research collaborative work
- Collaborations agreed/underway with
- Professor Narinder Kapur, Head of
Neuropsychology, Addenbrookes Hospital, Cambridge - Professor Adam Zeman, Professor of Cognitive and
Behavioural Neurology, Peninsula Medical School,
Exeter - Professor Jon Evans, Professor of Applied
Neuropsychology, University of Glasgow - Dr Chris Butler, Clinical Research Fellow,
Department of Neurology, University of Edinburgh - Dr Nick Alderman, Consultant Neuropsychologist,
St Andrews Hospital, Northampton
- Professor Barbara Wilson, Senior Scientist, MRC
Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, Cambridge - Professor John Hodges, Professor of Behavioural
Neurology, University of Cambridge - Professor Phillip Barnard, Research Scientist,
MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, Cambridge - Professor Martin Conway, Director of Research
ESRC Professorial Fellow, Leeds Memory Group,
University of Leeds - Dr Andrew Bateman, Clinical Director, Oliver
Zangwill Centre of Neuropsychological
Rehabilitation, Ely
17Ongoing research collaborative work
- John Hodges, Professor of Behavioural Neurology,
Addenbrookes Hospital - Mild Cognitive Impairment
- Early Alzheimers Disease
- Adam Zeman, Professor of Cognitive Behavioural
Neurology, Exeter - Epileptic amnesia
- Semantic dementia
- Oliver Zangwill Centre, Cambridge
- Brain Injury Rehabilitation
- Therapy
18Ongoing research collaborative work
- Collaboration with Martin Conway, Professor of
Cognitive Psychology, Leeds Memory Group, Editor
of the journal Memory - SenseCam is potentially the first truly
powerful 21st century memory stimulant which
could generally improve and strengthen memory in
normal aging populations and in those with brain
disease
19Ongoing research collaborative work
- Undertaking SenseCam memory studies based on two
hypotheses - 1. SenseCam movies mimic episodic memory
- Visual
- From egocentric point of view
- Temporally ordered
- Formed outside awareness
- Time compressed
- Correspond to changes in goal-directed behaviour
- Using SenseCam in experimental studies
- Investigating extent to which SenseCam stimulates
recall and strengthens learning - Asking How do we forget over time? and How do
our memories decline with age?
20Ongoing research collaborative work
- Professor Conways hypotheses contd
- 2. SenseCam movies stimulate brain regions
important for memory consolidation - Hippocampus and related memory structures
- Neural networks not easily activated otherwise
- Using SenseCam in neuroimaging studies
- Investigating the functional neuroanatomy of
episodic memory in the normal population and in
patients
21Final words
- SenseCam may be an extremely powerful aid for
people with memory disorders - SenseCam may be a potential innoculation
against memory decline in the normal ageing
population