Title: Memory Problems
1Memory Problems
2Case Study
- 66 year old mechanic suffered from an embolic
infarct (stroke) affecting both medial temporal
lobes, the left hippocampus - Initial tests indicated severe anterograde and
retrograde amnesia. Some difficulty naming
certain objects and experiences - He could talk, read, write,working memory in
tact, could acquire new procedural skills
3How Do We Classify Memory Problems ?
- Typed of Problem - Disease (Viral Encephalitis /
Alzheimers / Korsakoff), Trauma (concussion /
stroke), Emotional (PTSS), or Neurochemical - Localization -Brain structures involved in the
problem (sometimes difficult to find) - Functional Deficit - Location of the damage may
be the same between subjects but the functional
deficit may be different - Difficulty in studying memory problems due to the
high variability
4Memory Disorders
- Agnosias - deficits in recognizing familiar
stimuli - Aphasias - language deficits (alexia/reading,
agraphia/writing) - Apraxia - motor deficits (no disruption of motor
pathways) - Working Memory Disorders - resulting from
injuries to the temporoparietal region of the
frontal lobes - Amnesia - usually a loss in explicit memory
5Agnosias
- Prosopagnosia - failure to recognize faces
- Damasio (1990) described a woman who could not
recognize her familys faces or her own. She
could recognize people through voices, hair
color, eye color - Semantic Agnosias - Doctor, Does a mouse have a
beak? Subject, If I knew what a beak was I
could tell you. - Subjects episodic memory remained intact
6Agnosias
- Agnosias are not always uniform - one subject
might have more difficulty with living than
nonliving objects - When asked to name objects in categories (land
animals, water animals, birds, vegetables, fruit,
body parts...) one subject showed an advantage of
animal over food identification, another subject
did better on foods, furniture, and body parts
7Working Memory Deficits
- Impairments of the phonological system have been
observed in patients with lesions in the
posterior left hemisphere (CT/MRI) - Recall difficulty with spoken names, prices of
goods seen on a label - Performance is very poor on auditory and word
span tests - Is this a problem in the Phonological Store or
the Articulitory Loop?
8Working Memory Deficits
- Sketchpad
- Subject sustained bilateral lesions in the
temporo-occipital regions - There was a clear dissociation on tests of
spatial processing (mental rotation) and visual
processing (color detection)
9Working Memory Deficits
- Damage to the frontal lobes may result in
impairments of Executive Control - Often shows Prospective Memory impairment -
failing to remember to execute a task in response
to an external cue or after a certain time has
elapsed - Failure to remember the frequency of occurrences
of events in retaining spatial sequences and
temporal order - Failure to remember the source of the information
10Aphasias
- Wernickes - impairment in the comprehension of
word elements - Patients speak nonsense words. Phrase and
sentence length, intonation and articulation are
fine - Can not read or understand auditory information
- Posterior Perisylvian region damage
11Aphasias
- Pure Word Deafness
- Cannot hear words. Patients are not deaf and can
distinguish between nonverbal sounds - Pure Word Blindness
- Person has no visual concept of lexical
information - Loses the ability to read (alexia)
12Agraphias
- Difficulty in writing
- Aphasic agraphia - many spelling and grammatical
errors - Constructional agraphia - words are formed
clearly but wrongly arranged on the page - Apraxic agraphia - can not form written letters
13Amnesic Disorders
- Include the loss of memories for past experience
and of the ability for new learning - These disorders are attributed (in part) to
damage in the medial temporal lobe including the
hippocampus, the diencephalon, and the basal
forebrain
14Amnesic Syndrome
- Retrograde - involves impairment in the
recollection of facts and episodes experienced
before the injury/problem - Anterograde - involves impairment of remembering
new facts and episodes experienced after the
injury - Relatively spared functions may include memory
for skills, implicit, semantic, and performance
on such working memory tasks such as the digit
span
15Retrograde Amnesia
- May include the loss of autobiographical,
semantic, or general event memory - Tests of autobiographical memory - asked to
recall or is cued about such life periods, or
themes such as school, friends, marriage - Recollection failure is usually uniform across
preceding decades - Some times of information is lost while others
are retained (i.e. forget family faces not famous
faces)
16Anterograde Amnesia
- In mild brain damage, subjects tend to regain the
ability to learn new information - Learning problems may not be uniform across tasks
- Assessment - Wechsler Memory Scale (Subtests
paired-associate, story, digit span, reproduce
drawings)
17Though the study of memory deficits have an
important influence on theories of the brain,
there is still the problem of how the deficits
actually work
18Explaining Amnesia
- Input Theories - (Cermak) perhaps amnesiacs do
not spontaneously encode material at a deep
semantic level - Found that Amnesiacs do show Levels of Processing
Effects - Faster Forgetting - learning would be normal
- (Hopper) found that amnesic and control patients
forget at the same rate
19Explaining Amnesia
- Retrieval Deficit
- Interference Hypothesis - might have a great deal
of interference - Results showed no difference between controls and
amnesiacs - Contextual Hypothesis - might not be able to
associate cues with learned information - Related to source monitoring errors
- Still remains popular but not conclusive
20Memory Problems Due to Disease
21Alzheimers Disease
- Effects 45 of people over the age of 85
- The disease is progressive starting with minor
memory loss to losing track of everyday
activities, and failing to recognize friends and
family. Also a deterioration of cognitive and
emotional functions - Due to a general degeneration of the brain
resulting in atrophy and growth of plaques
22Alzheimers (Explicit Memory)
- Learning strategies do not have an effect (levels
of processing, list organization). Also,
retrieval cues do not help - Autobiographical - a temporal gradient, with more
recent memories more vulnerable than remote
memories - Word naming is poor, but there is a pattern.
Errors suggest that the fine distinctions are
affected and the abstract distinctions are spared
23Alzheimers (Explicit Memory)
- Patients tend to perform better in visual than in
verbal semantic tasks - Semantic organization seems to be in terms of
concrete dimensions, such as size, rather than in
terms of abstract attributes, such as domesticity
24Alzheimers (Working Memory)
- The Phonologic Loop are relatively well
preserved. Show phonologic similarity and word
length effects - Not much known about the Sketchpad
- Executive dysfunction is the most noticeable.
Thus, problems with deviled attention
25Alzheimers (Implicit Memory)
- Priming effects are still found in Alzheimers
patients, though reduced - Still have motor memory (skills), such as making
a telephone call or coffee - Still can learn procedural skills such as
tracking a moving target in the pursuit rotor task
26What Have We Learned From Studying Memory
Disorders?
- Memory does not seem to be a unitary system.
27Memory in Older Adults (60)
- There is no question that memory declines with
age - In older age there is a decrease in the brain
blood flow, oxygen and protein metabolism, and
fewer neurotransmitters - The question is - Why does memory decline
- Overall there is a great deal of speculation as
to the locus of the problem
28Aging (encoding hypothesis)
- One idea is that older adults fail to encode
environmental cueing information - There is strong support for and against this idea
(i.e. context usually helps younger adults
remember words in a sentence, but not so in older
adults - yes and no) - Overall we can agree on the fact that older
adults take longer to encode information compared
to younger adults
29Aging (retrieval hypothesis)
- People are generaly better at recognition than
they are at recall. However, recall problems are
greater in older adults - Overall, it seems that older adults have greater
difficulty in rinstating the circumstances under
which they acquired information. This is called
sources forgetting (similar to ideas associated
with amnesia)
30Aging (semantic memory)
- There does not seem to be any difference between
younger and older adults in semantic memory - Older adults do however, have more frequent
tip-of-the-tongue occurances - It is generally believed that this may be due to
the cognitive slowing hypothesis
31Aging (implicit memory)
- Implicit memory is often related to memory for
skills (driving, playing an instrument) - Overall, there does not seem to be any decrease
in implicit memory in older adults - Ex. A study looking at younger and older piano
players. There were no differences in number of
errors, force applied to keys, or interkey
intervals - In fact older adults may use implicit memory more
efficiently in order to compensate for slowing
motor responses