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Learning and Memory

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Memory = persistence of information that can be revealed at at ... in region of left angular gyrus, inferior parietal and posterior-superior temporal cortex ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Learning and Memory


1
Learning and Memory
  • Learning process of acquiring new information.
    The outcome of learning is
  • Memory persistence of information that can be
    revealed at at later time.

2
Processes of Learning and Memory
  • Encoding processing of new information
  • Acquisition sensory registration and analysis
  • Consolidation strengthening of representation
    over time
  • Storage creation and maintenance of permanent
    record
  • Retrieval use of stored information

3
Taxonomy of Memory
  • Sensory short duration persistence of
    information
  • Short-term medium duration persistence of
    information
  • Long-term long duration persistence of
    information

4
Properties of Memory
  • Sensory short duration persistence of
    information
  • High capacity
  • Iconic visual, lt 1 s duration
  • Sperling's partial report studies

5
Properties of Memory
  • Sensory short duration persistence of
    information
  • High capacity
  • Iconic visual, lt 1 s duration
  • Echoic auditory, about 10 s duration
  • Sams et al. (1993) - mismatch field

6
Properties of Memory
  • Sensory
  • Short-term
  • Limited-capacity
  • G. Miller - Magic number 7 /- 2
  • Chunking
  • Maintenance by rehearsal
  • Loss via decay Petersen and Petersen (1959)

7
Properties of Memory
  • Sensory
  • Short-term
  • Limited-capacity
  • Maintenance by rehearsal
  • Loss via decay
  • Serial position effect
  • Primacy LTM, eliminated by preventing storage
    (increased pace)
  • Recency STM, eliminated by preventing rehearsal
    (distractor task at end of list)

8
Properties of Memory
  • Sensory
  • Short-term
  • Limited-capacity
  • Maintenance by rehearsal
  • Models of STM
  • "Modal" model (e.g., Atkinson and Schiffrin
    1968))

9
Properties of Memory
  • Sensory
  • Short-term
  • Limited-capacity
  • Maintenance by rehearsal
  • Models of STM
  • "Modal" model (e.g., Atkinson and Schiffrin
    1968))
  • BUT, patients with damage near left supramarginal
    gryus have impaired digit span and can still form
    long term memories

10
Properties of Memory
  • Sensory
  • Short-term
  • Limited-capacity
  • Maintenance by rehearsal
  • Models of STM
  • "Modal" model (e.g., Atkinson and Schiffrin
    1968))
  • Levels of processing (Craik and Lockhart, 1972)
  • Shallow superficial, poor LTM
  • Deep based on meaning, good LTM

11
Properties of Memory
  • Sensory
  • Short-term
  • Limited-capacity
  • Maintenance by rehearsal
  • Models of STM
  • "Modal" model (e.g., Atkinson and Schiffrin,
    1968)
  • Levels of processing (Craik and Lockhart, 1972)
  • Working memory (Baddeley, 1995)

12
Properties of Memory
  • Sensory
  • Short-term
  • Limited-capacity
  • Maintenance by rehearsal
  • Models of STM
  • "Modal" model (e.g., Atkinson and Schiffrin,
    1968)
  • Levels of processing (Craik and Lockhart, 1972)
  • Working memory (Baddeley, 1995)
  • Damage in LH to Area 40 affects acoustical
    processing
  • Damage in LH to Area 44 affects verbal rehearsal
  • Damage to LH or RH parieto-occipital areas
    affects visuospatial working memory, but more so
    in RH

13
Properties of Memory
  • Sensory
  • Short-term
  • Long-term
  • Virtually unlimited capacity
  • Loss via interference
  • Modular

14
Properties of Memory
  • Long-term
  • Subdivisions
  • Declarative explicit, conscious, personal and
    world knowledge
  • Episodic
  • Semantic
  • Nondeclarative implicit, below conscious
    awareness, skill-based
  • Procedural
  • Perceptual representation system
  • Associative
  • Nonassociative

15
Patient Studies of Amnesia
  • Amnesic patients have lost some aspect of memory
    function after neurosurgery, disease, head
    injury, etc.
  • Memory processes (encoding, storage, retrieval)
    and subdivisions of memory systems (STM/WM, LTM,
    declarative, nondeclarative) supported by patient
    data
  • Region of brain insult key to localization and
    differentiation of memory functions

16
Patient Studies of Amnesia
  • Types of amnesia
  • Illustration following ECT
  • Anterograde loss of memory after incident
  • Retrograde loss of memory preceding incident

17
Patient Studies of Amnesia
  • Data supporting differentiation of STM / WM from
    LTM
  • Patient EE
  • Patient HM
  • Patient RB

18
Patient Studies of Amnesia
  • Lesion location
  • Patient EE
  • Removal of tumor in region of left angular gyrus,
    inferior parietal and posterior-superior temporal
    cortex

19
Patient Studies of Amnesia
  • Lesion location
  • Patient EE
  • Patient HM
  • Bilateral medial temporal lobectomy to relieve
    epilepsy

20
Patient Studies of Amnesia
  • Lesion location
  • Patient EE
  • Patient HM
  • Patient RB
  • Bilateral ischemia localized to hippocampus
    during surgery

21
Patient Studies of Amnesia
  • Symptomatology
  • Patient EE
  • Failure of short-term/working memory
    (visuospatial sketchpad?) assessed by Token Test
  • Intact LTM

22
Patient Studies of Amnesia
  • Symptomatology
  • Patient EE
  • Patients HM and RB
  • Anterograde and isolated retrograde amnesia
  • Normal STM (digit span)
  • Failure of LTM

23
Patient Studies of Amnesia
  • Summary from Patients EE, HM and RB
  • Double dissociation of STM/WM and LTM
  • Patients HM and RB provide evidence that the
    hippocampus is necessary at encoding stage for
    consolidation of declarative memories into LTM
  • Hippocampus is not location for LTM storage
    (sensory and association neocortex?)
  • Hippocampus is not involved in LTM retrieval
    (anterior and lateral temporal cortex?)
  • BUT hippocampus not the only structure involved
    in formation of declarative memories

24
Patient Studies of Amnesia
  • Diencephalic Amnesia
  • Korsakoff's Syndrome
  • Anterograde and retrograde amnesia similar to HM
    and RB in alcoholics
  • Vitamin deficiencies that damage dorsomedial
    nucleus of thalamus and mammary bodies, but not
    medial temporal lobe

25
Patient Studies of Amnesia
  • Encoding in Amnesia
  • Amnesics can learn
  • Information that can be learned supports distinct
    memory systems
  • Often patients like HM can acquire some new
    semantic, but not episodic, information (loss of
    source memory)

26
Patient Studies of Amnesia
  • Encoding in Amnesia
  • Patient KC
  • Severe head trauma following motorcycle accident
  • Medial temporal, frontal, parietal and occiptal
    damage greater in LH than RH
  • Normal IQ and STM (digit span)
  • Severe anterograde and retrograde amnesia
    including loss of all episodic memory
  • Retained old and could acquire new semantic
    memories

27
Patient Studies of Amnesia
  • Encoding in Amnesia
  • Learning nondeclarative information
  • Procedural learning
  • Serial reaction time task

28
Patient Studies of Amnesia
  • Encoding in Amnesia
  • Learning nondeclarative information
  • Procedural learning
  • Serial reaction time task
  • Can be learned by patients like HM and
    Korsakoff's patients without episodic memory
  • Learned poorly by patients with basal ganglia
    disorders (like Parkinson's)

29
Patient Studies of Amnesia
  • Encoding in Amnesia
  • Learning nondeclarative information
  • Priming - improvement in identifying or
    processing a stimulus after observing it
  • Perceptual representation system
  • Word fragment completion test

30
Patient Studies of Amnesia
  • Encoding in Amnesia
  • Learning nondeclarative information
  • Perceptual representation system
  • Word fragment completion test
  • Measure of implicit learning
  • Performance not affected by depth of processing
    of list like explicit recognition task
  • Performance declines across days instead of hours
    for explicit recognition task
  • Perceptual phenomenon performance reduced when
    list presented auditorially

31
Patient Studies of Amnesia
  • Encoding in Amnesia
  • Learning nondeclarative information
  • Perceptual representation system
  • Word fragment completion test
  • Impossible figures test

32
Patient Studies of Amnesia
  • Encoding in Amnesia
  • Learning nondeclarative information
  • Perceptual representation system
  • Word fragment completion test
  • Impossible figures test
  • Priming occurs for possible figures when deciding
    whether figure is possible

33
Patient Studies of Amnesia
  • Encoding in Amnesia
  • Learning nondeclarative information
  • Perceptual representation system
  • Double dissociation for PRS
  • Patient KC
  • Shows word-priming but no episodic memory
  • Patient MS
  • Removal of area 18 19 of RH to treat epilepsy
  • Normal WAIS IQ and memory
  • No word priming

34
Neuroimaging Studies
  • Declarative Memory
  • HERA Model Hemispheric encoding/retrieval
    asymmetry (Tulving et al., 1994)
  • Encoding involves LH more than RH
  • Retrieval involves RH more than LH

35
Neuroimaging Studies
  • Declarative Memory
  • Criticisms of HERA Model (Miller et al., 2002)
  • Most studies use word stimuli
  • Many use poorly controlled stimulus materials
  • Both hemispheres can encode and retrieve, BUT are
    specific to material
  • LH for words
  • RH for faces
  • Intra-hemisphere connections given preference
    over inter-hemisphere connections

36
Neuroimaging Studies
  • Nondeclarative Memory
  • Procedural memory (Grafton at al., 1995)
  • Implicit motor learning involves motor cortex,
    supplementary motor area, putamen, basal ganglia,
    prefrontal and parietal cortex

37
Neuroimaging Studies
  • Nondeclarative Memory
  • Procedural memory (Grafton at al., 1995)
  • Perceptual priming (Schacter et al., 1996)
  • rCBF reduction in Brodmann area 19
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