Title: Neurophysiology and Hypnosis
1 Neurophysiology and Hypnosis
- The physiology of therapy
2Ramachandran Reith Lectures 2003
- The boundary between neurology and psychiatry
is becoming increasingly blurred and its only a
matter of time before psychiatry becomes just
another branch of neurology.
3Five separate strands
- New perspectives in depression
- New perspectives in memory
- New perspectives in emotion
- New perspectives in well-being
- New perspectives in neuro-anatomy,
neuro-chemistry and neuro-physiology
4New perspectives in neuro-anatomy,
neuro-chemistry and neuro-physiology
5Conditioned Learning
1 Hebb d (1949), The organisation of behaviour
Wiley, New York
2 Bailey C, Kandel E (1993) Structural changes
accompanying memory storage Annual Rev.
Neuroscience 55 397-426
- How are memories written, and associations
strengthened in the brain. - Hebbs proposed a model in 1949 that fragile,
dynamic memory traces would be translated into
stable, long term memory.1 - Subsequent research has teased out some of the
details about how this is done. - Eric Kandel working with the sea slug Aplysia
discovered that short term memory triggers a
cascade of molecular changes at the post synaptic
neurone.2 This enhances the signal to the motor
neurons, making the muscle contract longer.
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8The Human Factor
- Studies of associative learning in mammals has
come mainly from studies of the Hippocampus, by
co-incidence one of the most important brain
structures involved in the processing of memory
short term and long term. This is partly because
sections are easy to obtain and study.
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12So how does the brain learn? How do two separate
signals become associated?
132 Types of Post Synaptic Receptor
- Most synapses in the brain are actually
inhibitory. - However the excitatory synapses are the ones that
deal with associative learning. - Most excitatory sinuses are glutamate mediated.
- Glutamate then stimulates 2 types of post
synaptic synapse. NMDA and AMPA receptors.
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17LTPLong Term PotentiationLTDLong Term
DepressionSynaptic Plasticity
18LTP
- Calcium influx induces many changes depending on
the rate of stimulus, in LTP it triggers the
expression of mRNA in the relevant post-synaptic
terminal only (not the whole cell) - Exact mechanism is not known, many chemicals
could cause this increase. - CREB is one of these Cyclic AMP response element
binding protein. It binds to DNA
19Phosphorylation of CREB may be the key to LTP.
Interestingly CREB like molecules have also been
shown to exhibit prion like behaviour, so that
above a certain concentration it becomes
permanently switched on.1
1 Kausik S, Lindquist S, Kandel E (2003) A
neuronal isoform of the aplysia CPEB has prion
like properties Cell vol 115, 873-891
20Hippocampus.Place cells and Head direction cells
- In 1984 while James Ranck was attempting to find
particular neurons in a rat cortex his electrode
slipped and went to the wrong area. The cell the
measuring electrode was in however responded to
the direction that the rat pointed its head in,
but only one direction stimulated that cell with
a very narrow margin of stimulation for
directions within a few degrees either side.
Independent of position or place or movement the
cells still responded only to that initial
compass bearing. He called these head
direction cells.
21Place cells
- Then other researchers discovered cells in the
rat hippocampus that appeared to respond only to
one place in their environment. Every time the
rat passed that spot the cell would fire again
within a very narrow margin. These they called
place cells. - In October 1998 Edmund Rolls discovered similar
head direction cells for head direction in
macaques - The cells he discovered don't keep track of where
the animal is, but where it is looking, encoding
positions "out there" in space. - This fits with the much more visual world of the
primate
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23Head Direction in Humans
- In primates head direction cells are found in the
mamillary bodies, as can be seen right next to
the hippocampus. - In humans lesions of the mamillary bodies leads
to a particular pattern of memory loss in which
context cannot be recalled properly.
24Place cells
- So the CA1 cells of the hippocampus become
markers on a visuo-spatial map that we carry in
our head of any particular space. Effectively we
carry a road map of where we are and, through
memory, of all the places we have been in the
past.
25Place cells
1 Experience-dependent phase reversal of
hippocampal neuron firing during REM sleep Poe G
et al Brain Research 855 (2000) 176-180
- After the animal enters a new environment a new
set of place cells is imprinted on the cells in
the CA1 region, a new map is put down. When the
animal rests, underlying theta rhythms stimulate
these cells and strengthen the synapses in this
particular map (i.e. strengthens the links to the
places of significance). Then the whole map is
written over the next few days to the neo-cortex,
and the place cells then start to fire in a
different rhythm, and with the change in the
co-ordination of the theta rhythm from the
thalamus these cells become out of phase1
leading as we have already seen to long term
depression. The hippocampus within a week has
handed the entire map to the neo-cortex for long
term storage and is ready for a new map.
26During sleep the hippocampus plays snippets to
the cortex (in REM) and the cortex then replies
(in Slow wave sleep), strengthening significant
connections with events from past experience.
Thus without slow wave sleep procedural memory
cannot improve.
27- The hippocampus is the patient, troubled with
memories of the day, and the cortex is the
therapist. "In the first part, during the
slow-wave sleep, they talk about what happened,
replaying the autobiographical memories from the
hippocampus. During REM the cortex replies, and
they look at how this information fits together.
More slow-wave sleep, more explanation. The two
memory systems talk back and forth trying to come
to a consensus on what these memories mean.
Stickgold R from New Scientist
28The Amygdala
- The amygdala is a very ancient structure which is
very active in aversive conditioning. It has
direct links to the hippocampus and the
hypothalamus and the pre-frontal cortex. It has
two basic nuclei the medial amygdalar nucleus
which connects directly to the hypothalamus and
stimulates production of ACTH and adrenaline, and
the lateral nuclei which inhibits the medial
nuclei.
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31Amygdala connections
32The pre-frontal cortex PFC
- The prefrontal cortex PFC combines information
from different modalities to take account of the
rapidly changing exigencies of the
environment.Consists of orbitofrontal OFC and
dorsolateral PFC. - The orbitofrontal PFC contains the secondary
taste cortex and the secondary olfactory cortex.
Cells combine information from the primary areas
with visual information and combine this with
appetitive information from the hypothalamus to
give each object a value in the current
circumstances so that the organism can be given
the appropriate motivation for action. Thus
information on an object in the visual cortex (a
mate) will always be the same, but on hitting the
pre-frontal cortex will be given a value
depending on what other factors are operating
internally (hunger, thirst).
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34Reward cells.
- The cells in the OFC thus will be stimulated by
the sight of food and measure the degree of
hunger internally and if action is decided the
electrical discharge of the cell is used to drive
the motor action required via the cingulate to
the pre-motor cortex.
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37Orbitofrontal cortex
- As well as cells that respond to the sight of
food there are cells that fire when the food is
obtained, and cells that fire off when the food
is not obtained (although the visual cue
suggested it) or where the taste is not as
suggested i.e. bitter. - In a different part of the OFC there are cells
that respond to punishment or lack of punishment
(this is involved in extinction) i.e. expected
punishment doesnt come. - Reward cells are medial, punishment cells are
lateral.
38Aversive Conditioning
- In aversive conditioning, the punishment is
represented in the orbitofrontal cortex, and the
amygdala. The pain (CS) is written onto the
orbitofrontal cell along with the UCS (visual
cue) and a connection rapidly set up between the
two modalities while the same happens in the
amygdala. - Conditioning and extinction use the same areas so
have the same connections, however the difference
between conditioning and extinction is that the
lateral nucleus of the amygdala is stimulated,
presumably by cells that signal a lack of
punishment and this new memory then inhibits the
output of the amygdala.
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40Extinction
41Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortex
- Dorsolateral PFC carries information about and
rewards and punishments, but in this case in
relation to temporo-spatial information ie
left/right up/down to hold a object in a
position in working memory while attending to it.
It also holds all working memory functions. - Working memory refers to a number of brain
regions held under the executive control of the
DLPFC holding information in a feedback loop.
42Attractor NetworksHolding Working Memory
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44- So why have 2 systems of association in the
primate brain? Essentially they are carrying out
the same functions. - However Primates are essentially visual, encoding
2.1 million colours with better colour vision
than any other species (extra colour cone over
all other species). Primates feed off over 100
different food types and need a rapid way of
ascribing values to different food groups.
45Pre Frontal Cortex
1 Ghazanafar A, Santos L (2004) Primate brains
in the wild the sensory basis for social
interactions Nature Reviews Neuroscience vol 5
603-616
- Even more important, higher primates and
particularly humans need to be able to respond
rapidly to changing social conditions, relying on
almost instant changes in the reward/punishment
contingencies in a social group. - There is a large input from all the face areas in
the Inferior Temporal Cortex, for individual
faces and for facial expressions. These systems
are very sensitive to changes of facial
expression and to direction of head combined with
direction of gaze1, as gaze and head direction
are vitally important indicators of status
46Important
1 Davidson R (1998) Affective style and
affective disorders perspectives from affective
neuroscience. Cogn. Emotion 7 115-138
- Notice that the dorsolateral PFC has a strong
inhibitory effect on the amygdala. - Davidson1 has proposed that that in humans and
possibly other primates the major inhibitory
influence on the amygdala is from the pre-frontal
cortex. - Consistent with this idea PET studies of the
amygdala have shown a reciprocal inverse coupling
of metabolism in these two areas2. - Davidson proposes that this mechanism may be
responsible for the dampening of negative affect
and shortening of its time duration in
individuals with strong working memory, which may
be a trait or conditioned3. This is reinforced by
Brewins work (see later) - The best way to reinforce working memory is
active generative visualisation or the
performance of multiple tasks simultaneously
(visualisation and Thought field therapy)
2 Abercrombie H et al (1996) Medial Prefrontal
and amygdalar glucose metabolism indepressed and
control subjects an FDG PET study
Psychophisiology 33 s17
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48New perspectives in memory
- Consolidation and Re-consolidation
49Memory consolidation and reconsolidation
1 Misanin JR et al (1968) Retrograde amnesia
produced by electroconvulsive shock after
reactivation of a consolidated memory trace
- Prior to 1968 memories were thought to gradually
enter a consolidated unchanging state - Lewis (1968)1 and colleagues gave
electro-convulsive shock (ECS) 24 hours after
fear conditioning.This was ineffective in
generating amnesia. - However if the memory was reactivated before ECS
it was effective in generating amnesia. - This was used to treat psychoses at the time
(Rubin 19692 19763) - Therefore reactivation of a consolidated memory
presumably returned it to a labile state , which
elicited another time dependent memory process
similar to that seen after new learning. - This phenomenon now called reconsolidation. This
is defined by the amnesic agent only being
effective after memory reactivation, not if
reactivation omitted
2 Rubin RD et al (1969) New application of ECT
Advances in Behaviour Therapy 1968 (Rubin RD,.
Franks C et al eds) pp 37-44 Academic press
3 Rubin RD (1976) Clinical use of retrograde
amnesia produced by electroconvulsive shock a
conditioning hypothesis Can Psych association J
21, 87-90
50Reconsolidation
1 Nader K et al (2000) Fear Memories require
protein synthesis in the amygdala for
reconsolidation after retrieval Nature 406
722-726
- As with so much Science, mostly forgotten until
Nader 2000.1 - In the meantime it had become clear that
- 1 long term memory (LTM) formation was dependent
on the recruitment of NMDA receptors stimulating
calcium release into active dendrites triggering
calmudolin which produces increasing protein
production. - 2 suppressing protein formation in the crucial
early formation of Long Term Memory erased the
memory. (using actinomycin D) - The reconsolidation was blocked by NMDA receptor
blockers only in animals exposed to the context
before administration2. This is a cross species
effect (crustaceans to mammals)
2 Sara SJ (2000) Strengthening the shaky trace
through retrieval Nat. Rev Neuroscience 1 212-213
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53Reconsolidation
- Nader (2000) found that if a memory was revived
just before administration of actinomycin D then
the animal became totally amnesic - If the memory was not revived there was no change.
54Reconsolidation
1 Anokhin KV et al (2002) Reminder effects
reconsolidation or retrieval deficit?
Pharmacological dissection with protein synthesis
inhibitors following reminder for a passive
avoidance task in young chicks Eur J Neuroscien
15 1759-1765
- Largest study on re-consolidation1 established
that - 1 on re-testing, the amnesia produced by blockade
of reconsolidation (but not consolidation) could
recover. - 2 reconsolidation was more sensitive to amnesic
challenge than consolidation. - 3 reconsolidation occurred faster than
consolidation
55Reconsolidation
- Found to involve CREB transcription factor Ca2
response element binding protein. - CREB has downstream immediate early gene targets
Fos and zif268 these are found in the amygdala
during auditory reactivation and zif268 in the
amygdala and hippocampus in contextual memory
reactivation. - In the hippocampus consolidation occurs at a
second level that lasts from 1-more weeks called
systems consolidation. The recent memories are
slowly erased from the hippocampus and written to
the cerebral cortex. This occurs by the recently
reinforced memories slowly over 3-4 days changing
their phase of firing so that the potentiation
becomes extinguished. - Lesions of the hippocampus 45 days after
conditioning has no effect on the subsequent
expression of contextual fear conditioning.
However if the context is reactivated even 90
seconds before the lesion, amnesia occurs,
showing that the memory returns to a hippocampal
dependent state which lasts only 2-3 days. - The decreased length of time for which the
hippocampus is necessary after reactivation is
consistent with the updating of neocortical
memories even though cortical memories are
consolidated.
56Reconsolidation
- New research April 2004 Science
- Independent Cellular processes for hippocampal
memory consolidation and reconsolidation - Lee J Everitt B Thomas K
- Infused different antisense oligodeoxynucleotide
s in the dorsal hippocampus to establish the
function of two separate components in memory,
antisense Brain Derived Neurotrophic Factor
(BDNF) and antisense Zif268 - Their experiment established BDNF blocking
prevented consolidation of memory (causing
amnesia) but had no effect on reconsolidation.
Zif268 blocking prevented reconsolidation of
memory (causing amnesia) but had no effect on
consolidation - Therefore reconsolidation of fear memory does not
engage the same molecular systems as
consolidation.
57Reconsolidation
- Crucially the Zif268 antisense infusion had no
effect on fear memory (measured by animal
freezing) when the animal was not re-exposed to
the context. - The disruption of re-consolidation was critically
dependent on re-exposure to the training context
as demonstrated by the lack of amnesia when the
reactivation trial was omitted - The crucial area was found to be the CA1 area in
the dorsal hippocampus where 2 hours after memory
retrieval the level of Zif268 was maximal.
58Reconsolidation-important points
- Memory is a plastic and transient affair,
whenever a memory is recalled it is able to be
modified - Memory is in a dynamic balance
- Implications for treatment of any client using
regression or vivid recall - Memory may be modified by many psychological
tools, these will probably soon be explicable
(Rapid Eye Movement, Thought Field Therapy) - Does Brewins experiment show that engaging
attention may alter memories by suppressing the
amygdala through inhibitory pathways from PFC?
59Important points
- The hippocampus will recall contextual
information in 90 seconds. - Reconsolidation happens in only 2 days,
consolidation takes a week and it takes 45 days
to completely remove a consolidated memory to the
cortex. - These techniques have been successfully used in
ECT so regression probably fulfils the same
purpose.
60In Therapeutic Terms
Review Memory traces unbound Nader K (2003)
Trends in Neurosciences Vol 26 No 2
- The past is the past, and we cannot change
the past, but we can change the way we feel about
the past with more happy choices for the future.
61New Perspectives in Emotion
- The feeling of what happens Antonio Damasio
Vantage Press 2000 - Damasio hypothesises that there are 3 levels of
consciousness - 1. The Proto-self (wakefulness ability to react
to objects) leads to second order maps of
organism/object relationship. - 2. Core consciousness allows enhanced attention
and working memory leads to conventional memory
combines with autobiographical memory and leads
to - 3. Extended consciousness
62Emotions (neurology)
- Emotions are a complicated collection of chemical
and Neural responses, forming a pattern all
emotions have some kind of regulatory role to
play, leading to the creation of circumstances
that are advantageous to the organism.
63Emotions (therapy)
- I have respect for the part of you that is
causing this feeling, you got where you are
today, you are successful in doing many of the
things you do and I am convinced that this part
of you that is causing this feeling although you
may not appreciate it is trying to do something
positive on your behalf.
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65Types of Emotion
- Primaryhappiness sadness anger fear surprise
disgust - Secondary or Social embarrassment jealousy guilt
pride - Background well-being malaise calm tension
66Conscious/Unconscious?
- It is not necessary to have extended
consciousness to use emotions. - The presence of emotion and feeling may be
totally unconscious, but still cause changes in
the skeletal and autonomic nervous system. - Examples from people with no autobiographical
memoryDavid no autobiographical memory but
flinches when introduced to bad guy. Woman with
skin conductance changes to faces she has no
memory of but are family or friends.
67Theories of Emotion
68- James-Lange theory
- We experience emotion in response to
physiological changes. Sensory system reacts to
the changes evoked by the brain and it is this
sensation that constitutes the emotion - Canon Bard theory.
- Emotional expression can occur independently of
emotional expression.
69- Canon-Bard based their theory on certain
observations on animals and humans with
transaction of the spinal cord. This putatively
removed the the ability to sense sensations below
the level of the cut, but did not appear to
effect the expression of emotion in the animals
(similar in humans)
70Vagal Afferents
(1)Peripheral arousal related hormones modulate
noradrenaline release in the hippocampus via
influences on brainstem nuclei Miyashita T,
Williams C (2004) Behavioural Brain Research vol
153 issue 1 pp 87-95
- However the modern evidence reveals a myriad of
effects that the vagus transmits. - Noradrenaline peripherally administered increased
the activity in the NTS (nuleus tractus
solitaris-vagal nucleus) this in turn causes
increased noradrenaline in the hippocampus, so
increases memory storage. (1) - 80 of the vagus nerve is afferent fibres
relaying information to the brain.
71- What Canon failed to realise is that the relaying
of these vagal afferents is how the brain
recognises the physiological changes in the
organs and particularly the effects of systemic
amines. Also the cranial nerves have a huge
emotional impact, the trigeminal and the facial
nerve conveying the state of the facial muscles.
72FEELINGS
- Canon also said that the fact that cats and dogs
with cord transection and vagal transection
displayed the facial characteristics of emotion
meant that these lesion left emotion intact.
However Damasio says the presence of the pathway
for facial reactions to stimuli does not denote
any feeling only reaction.
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75Important
- An emotion may not be felt, and even if felt it
need not be consciously felt. The trigger for
the unconscious background emotion may well not
be traceable consciously. By the time the brain
has noticed the autonomic changes the trigger
will be long gone. This makes an exercise like
collapsing anchors very useful.
76Subjective well being1
- 1 Kahneman D Diener E Schwarz N (1999)
Well-being the foundations of hedonic psychology
Russel Sage (New York) Ch 4 Reports of subjective
well-beingjudgemental processes and their
methodological implications. Norbert Schwarz and
Fritz Strack
- SWB feelings of happiness marks out of ten
- Based on the comparison of present situation (the
target) to another situation (the standard) which
may be past, future, or counterfactuals (what
might have been) - Depressed people compare target to
counterfactuals, decreasing SWB - Relevant to mental training in terms of memories
of the future although this is in fact
experiencing the future as the present (the
target) and comparing it to the present(the
standard which becomes the past)) hence
increasing SWB which allows actual better use of
processing to achieve the goal.
77Subjective well being
- If we call to mind a past event with strong
positive affect this affect will override the
comparison effect this is an assimilation effect. - Question order may affect assessments of SWB
- Certain factors increase mood valency from past
events. - Schwarz and Strack 1999
78Valence of Event
79Subjective well being
- In summary, the best way of increasing positive
mood states is with detailed description of how
something happened that was positive. In
recalling a stressful event we concentrate on the
happy feelings at the outcome. - This can then be fixed with a trigger or an
anchor. - Fixation of positive mood state automatically
triggers effective processing from dopamine
release in the pre frontal cortex. - Once we are aware of the source of our positive
mood state it is discounted, non-conscious is
best (schwarz 1983) - Non conscious processing most efficient for
paralell processing. Use of verbal reasoning
reduces performance.
80Important
- Vivid recall of how an event proceeded is an
effective way of fixing positive mood states
which may then provide the ability to recall
successful problem solution.
81Depression PTSD Chris Brewin
- Dissociation, Encoding, thought suppression and
working memory capacity
82Demonstration
83Intrusive Thoughts
1Intrusive Autobiographical memories in
depression and post-traumatic stress disorder
Brewin C (1998) applied cognitive psychology vol.
12 359-370
- Brewin examined the correlates of depression and
PTSD. He found that there were certain
similarities between the conditions. He examined
large numbers of depressed people. - He particularly looked at research into intrusive
autobiographical memories. - Both depressed and PTSD patients reported these,
the difference was that PTSD patients had greater
evidence of dissociation at the time of the
incidents.
84Normal Population.
1Brewin C Christodoulides J and Hutchison G
(1996) Intrusive thoughts and memories in a
nonclinical sample. Cognition and Emotion 10
107-112
- In non-clinical populations intrusive thoughts
and memories both common, thoughts commoner.1 - When thoughts elicited first, they were more
unpleasant. Thoughts associated with fear,
memories with sadness or happiness.1 - In normal population involuntary memories are
usually positive.2 - Ease of retrieval based on the intensity of the
experience and its life impact.3
2Bernetsen D, (1996) Involuntary
autobiographical memories Applied Cognitive
Psychology 10 435-454
3 Pillerner D, Goldsmith J, Panter A, White S
(1988) Very Long Term Memories in the first year
of college Journal of Experimental
PsychologyLearning, Memory and Cognition 14
709-715
85Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
1 Koss M, Tromp S, Tharan M (1995) Traumatic
memories empirical foundations, forensic and
clinical implications Clinical Psychology
Science and Practice 2 111-132
- Intrusive memories are characterised by even
greater clarity and persistence accompanied by
high levels of emotional arousal containing
strong sensory and perceptual features. - Memory for central facts is accurate and
persistent, memory for peripheral details is less
consistent or impaired.1 - Differ from non-clinical samples in that they
often consist of parts and fragments of events,
experienced as reliving the event in the present
moment, and content cannot be deliberately
retrieved, indeed is actively excluded. - These observations led to Brewin et als dual
representation theory of PTSD.
861 Brewin C, Phillips E, Carroll F, Tata P (1996)
Intrusive memories in depression Psychological
Medicine 26 1271-1276
2 Brewin et al in press at 2002
- Mixed sex sample of depressed patients 27/31
reported intrusive memories for past life events
associated with depression, 2-3 memories per week
with high levels of intrusion and avoidance for
each.1 - A stringent test of this hypothesis that
depression n leads to an increase in the
accessibility of specific autobiographical
memories would involve comparing depressed and
non-depressed exposed to the same stress. This
was done with patients diagnosed with cancer.
Depression level throughout was closely matched
with level of intrusive thoughts.2 - Overgenerality is the symptom most closely
predictive of future depression. 3 - It is proposed that overgeneral is related to
deficits in problem solving because patients
cannot retrieve appropriate memories of
successful problem solution.4 - Overgeneral memory related to reported chilhood
sexual abuse and to more avoidance as measured by
IES5
3 Brittlebank A, Scott J, Williams J Ferrier I
(1993) Autobiographical memory in depression
State or Trait marker British Journal of
Psychiatry 162 118-121
4 Williams J (1992) Autobiographical memory and
emotional disorders in S A Christensen (Ed)
Handbook of emotion and memory 451-477 Hillsdale
N.JErlbaum
5 Kuyken W, Brewin C (1994) Intrusive memories
of childhood abuse during depressive episodes
Behaviour research and therapy 32 525-591
87- 54 depressed women 35 reported criteria for
childhood physical or sexual abuse. 30 had
intrusive memories of abuse related incidents in
the previous week.1
88- Although only correlational these studies raise
the possibility that patients attempts to avoid
intrusive autobiographical memories are causally
implicated in their overgeneral memory problem. - From all these studies and others Brewin
concluded that there were few differences between
controls depressed patients and PTSD patients
other than the severity of their intrusion and
avoidance the only real difference being that
dissociative out-of-body responses are more
common with PTSD. He refutes Becks idea of
generalised negative schema as the data is much
more about avoidance.
89Dual Memory Theory
- Brewin identifies specific differences between
memories that are part of an autobiographical
narrative, so called Verbally Accessible Memory
(VAM) and memories that are fragmented with
flashbacks only under limited strategic control.
Patients have a limited ability to avoid these by
trying to avoid salient clues called
Situationally Accessible memory (SAM) - SAM comes from extensive lower level perceptual
processing of the scene and the patients response
to it. - The purpose of the flashback is to try to
transfer the experience into declarative memory
usually with limited success.
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91Thought Suppression, Intelligence , and working
memory capacity CR Brewin A BeatonBehaviour
Research and Therapy 40 (2002) 923-930
- Found that the ability of normal people to
suppress memories at will was related to their
working memory capacity. - This was logical as concentration is a factor
involved in not thinking about extraneous
factors. - This fits with the DLPFC inhibiting the amygdala.
- This led to the paper The Effect of encoding on
intrusive memories for a stressful film.(2001)
Brewin C and Saunders J - In this study they attempted to dissociate people
watching a stressful film by giving them a dual
task condition in which they performed a tapping
test. - They predicted that those doing the tapping test
would suffer more intrusive memories after the
film. - Result, however was that the reverse happened and
they suffered less intrusion with lower IES
scores. Brewin struggled to explain this at the
time, but subsequent ideas have seen the knitting
ladies at the guillotine may have been doing the
same.
92Important
- A tapping task engaging working memory will
reduce the IES scale after a stressful film. - Excessive amygdala activity will prevent VAM by
inhibiting the function of the hippocampus and
the PFC. - The amygdala is inhibited by the DLPFC