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Chapter Thirteen The Biology of Learning and Memory

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Title: Chapter Thirteen The Biology of Learning and Memory


1
Chapter ThirteenThe Biology of Learning and
Memory
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Chapter ThirteenThe Biology of Learning and
Memory
2
Localized Representations of Memory
2 of 40
  • Pavlovs classical conditioning
  • unconditioned stimulus (meat) automatically
    elicits an unconditioned response (dog salivates)
  • conditioned stimulus (metronome) initially
    elicits no response
  • conditioned response (dog salivates to metronome)
    is learned with repeated pairings of metronome
    with meat
  • but in some cases the learned behavior is not the
    same, e.g., if rat experiences light paired with
    shock, the shock elicits jumping but the CS
    elicits freezing

3
Localized Representations of Memory cont.
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  • Operant Conditioning an individuals response is
    followed by a reinforcement or punishment
  • reinforcement event that increases the future
    probability of the response
  • e.g. given froot loops for a correct response, a
    rat learns to return to the same arm of maze
  • punishment event that suppresses the frequency
    of the response
  • e.g. given a shock for the wrong response, a rat
    learns to avoid arm of maze

4
Figure 13.1
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  • Figure 13.1 Procedures for classical conditioning
    and operant conditioning. (a) In classical
    conditioning two stimuli (CS and UCS) are
    presented at certain times regardless of what the
    learner does. (b) In operant conditioning the
    learners behavior controls the presentation of
    reinforcement or punishment.

5
Localized Representations of Memory cont.
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  • Lashley searched for the engram, the physical
    representation of what has been learned (e.g.,
    connecting two brain areas through long term
    synaptic processes)
  • he trained rats on mazes and brightness
    discrimination tasks and made cuts between two
    brain areas or removed part of the brain
  • none of the deep cuts disrupted maze performance
  • maze performance was only decreased when large
    amounts of brain were removed
  • learning and memory does not depend on a single
    cortical area

6
Localized Representations of Memory cont.
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  • Lashley proposed two principles
  • equipotentiality all parts of the cortex
    contribute equally to complex behaviors like
    learning
  • mass action the cortex works as a whole, the
    more cortex the better
  • incorrectly assumed that all kinds of memory were
    physiologically the same and that the cortical
    area was the best place to search for an engram

7
Modern Search for the Engram
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  • Thompson et al in a classical conditioning task,
    they paired tone with puff of air until rabbit
    blinked at tone
  • found changes in cells in the lateral
    interpositus nucleus (LIP) of cerebellum
  • when LIP was cooled or drugged the rabbit did not
    learn and later when effects wore off rabbit
    learned at same rate as new rabbits
  • LIP had to be active to learn

8
Modern Search for the Engram cont.
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  • Thompson et al then suppressed activity in red
    nucleus (mid-brain motor area that receives input
    from cerebellum)
  • rabbits showed no response during training
  • when effects wore off rabbits showed strong
    learned response to CS
  • thus, red nucleus necessary for performance, not
    learning, of response

9
Modern Search for the Engram cont.
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  • Thompson found that
  • A. the engram is equipotential across multiple
    areas
  • B. the engram is in the red nucleus
  • C. the engram is in the cerebellum
  • D. the engram is an oversimplified concept

10
Figure 13.4
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  • Figure 13.4 Localization of an engram. Rabbits
    were trained on classical conditioning of an
    eyelid response. Temporary suppression of
    activity in the lateral interpositus nucleus of a
    rabbit blocked all indications of learning. After
    the suppression wore off, the rabbits learned as
    slowly as rabbits with no previous training.
    Temporary suppression of activity in the red
    nucleus blocked the response during he period of
    suppression, but the learned response appeared as
    soon as the red nucleus recovered from the
    suppression. (Source Bases on the experiments of
    Clark Lavond, 1993, and Krupa, Thompson,
    Thompson, 1993.)

11
Modern Search for the Engram cont.
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  • Probably same in humans
  • classical conditioning of eye blink produced
    activity in cerebellum, red nucleus and other
    areas
  • people with damage to cerebellum are impaired at
    eye-blink task

12
Hebb Short and Long-Term Memory
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  • Short-term events that have just occurred
  • limited capacity, around 7 unrelated items
  • if forgotten is lost forever
  • Long-term events from previous times
  • not lost, are recoverable
  • Consolidation
  • memories that stay in short-term memory long
    enough are formed into long-term memory

13
Consolidation of Long-Term Memory
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  • Research used ECS to disrupt memory, looking for
    short-and long term memory threshold
  • but, shock to head disrupted both short-term and
    long-term memories
  • also, some disrupted memories could be recovered
    after reminder of event
  • Human studies weaken the distinction between
    short- and long term memory
  • we can recall events more than a few hours, or
    days, old but nevertheless will be forgotten in
    near future

14
Consolidation of Long-Term Memory cont.
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  • Protein phosphatase 1 interferes with retention
    by inactivating genes that promote learning
  • we easily forget single experience
  • PP1 accumulates during massed practice and
    declines during distributed practice
  • Consolidation is gradual and we recall older
    memories easier
  • older people showed most MRI activity to
    celebrities in the 1990s and least to celebrities
    in the 1940s
  • people showed more temporal lobe activity to
    places visited in last 2 years than those visited
    in last 7 years

15
Consolidation of Long-Term Memory cont.
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  • What is the best study method? Why?
  • A. massed practice
  • B. studying at intervals
  • C. studying for short periods
  • D. studying for long periods
  • Why?

16
Consolidation of Long-Term Memory cont.
14 of 40
  • Meaningful and emotional experiences enhance
    memory consolidation, e.g, receiving award or
    being in car wreck
  • increases secretion of cortisol and epinephrine
  • epinephrine stimulates vagus nerve which excites
    cells in brain stem to activate the amygdala

17
Consolidation of Long-Term Memory cont.
15 of 40
  • Direct injections of cortisol or epinephrine
    enhance storage and consolidation
  • but prolonged stress results in more cortisol and
    memory is impaired
  • THE U SHAPED CURVE
  • After damage to amygdala, emotional arousal does
    not enhance memory storage
  • patients didnt remember taboo words better
  • FLASHBULB MEMORY

18
Baddeley Hitch Working Memory
17 of 40
  • Working memory we store information while
    working with it or attending to it
  • visuospatial sketchpad stores visual information
  • phonological loop stores auditory information
    independent of visual memory
  • central executive directs attention toward one
    stimulus or another

19
Baddeley Hitch Working Memory cont.
18 of 40
  • Prefrontal cortex stores working memories
  • shows high activity during delayed response tasks
    performed by humans and other mammals
  • also in tasks requiring different responses to
    signals given only after a delay
  • the stronger the activation in this area the
    better the performance

20
Hippocampus and Amnesia
19 of 40
  • H.M. had hippocampus removed which resulted in
  • moderate retrograde amnesia for events 1-3 years
    before operation
  • could not remember events after the operation
  • could not learn to find way to bathroom in
    hospital
  • could not remember telling story a few minutes
    later
  • could define common words but not infrequently
    used words
  • can learn new facts slowly, e.g., floor plan of
    home over many years

21
Hippocampus and Amnesia
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  • H.M. cont.
  • declarative memory deficit cant state memory in
    words
  • procedural memory intact can develop motor
    skills
  • can read words written backwards
  • can draw something seen in mirror
  • explicit memory deficit cant recall some
    memories in response to question, e.g., who are
    characters in novel?
  • implicit memory better experience influences
    behavior even if not remembered, e.g., always
    chose person who was friendly to him

22
Function of the Hippocampus
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  • Some support for critical role in declarative,
    explicit memory
  • true for H.M.
  • monkeys with damage are impaired in delayed
    matching (or non-matching) to sample task
  • but performs well if task always uses same
    objects
  • rats with damage have difficulty in learning
    correct temporal sequence for reward

23
Function of the Hippocampus cont.
22 of 40
  • Strong support for role in spatial memory
  • route questions to London taxi drivers activated
    hippocampus more than non-spatial questions
  • size of hippocampus related to length of time on
    job
  • damage impairs performance on spatial memory
    tasks, e.g., finding your way from one place to
    another
  • rats with damage here often enter correct alleys
    repeatedly and forget where platform is under
    water
  • correlation between hippocampus size and spatial
    memory in jay birds

24
Function of the Hippocampus cont.
23 of 40
  • Some support for role in configural memory where
    meaning depends on what is paired with stimulus
  • e.g. you learn that A or B means food and then A
    and B together means no food
  • but, damage impairs configural learning as well
    as memory on nonconfigural tasks
  • current hypothesis is that hippocampus quickly
    records stimuli that occur together only once and
    cortex detects repeated combinations
  • may bind pieces of experience in recall

25
Function of the Hippocampus cont.
24 of 40
  • Some support for role in the release of adrenal
    hormones
  • damage elevates adrenal release at same time it
    impairs memory
  • if drugs are used to block surge of hormones,
    spatial memory returns to normal
  • if so, why does damage affect memory at all

26
Korsakoffs Syndrome
25 of 40
  • Brain damage caused by long-term thiamin (B1)
    deficiency
  • cannot metabolize glucose (fuel)
  • leads to shrinkage of neurons throughout brain
  • especially in mamillary bodies in hippocampus and
    thalamus axons to prefrontal cortex
  • apathy,confusion, amnesia
  • better implicit than explicit memory
  • difficulty ordering past events
  • confabulates, i.e., remembers guesses as true
    memories

27
Alzheimers Disease
26 of 40
  • Severe memory loss associated with aging
  • Strikes 50 of those over 85
  • Better procedural than declarative memory, e.g.,
    can acquire new skills but doesnt remember
    learning
  • Genetic components
  • person with Downs syndrome (3 copies of
    chromosome 21) always acquire Alzheimers in
    middle age
  • genes on chromosome 14 and 1 related to early
    onset
  • genes on chromosome 10 and 19 related to late
    onset

28
Alzheimers Disease cont.
27 of 40
  • Environmental component
  • half of all cases have no known relatives with
    disease
  • Yoruba people of Nigeria have high-risk genes but
    lower incidence, maybe due to low-calorie, low
    fat, low salt diet
  • Brain proteins fold abnormally, clump together
    and interfere with normal neuronal activity
  • amyloid protein produces Aß42 plaques between
    neurons
  • tau protein produce tangles in cell bodies
  • apolipoprotein E causes cell loss and prevents
    removal of Aß42

29
Alzheimers Disease cont.
29 of 40
  • Treatment
  • elevated levels of glucose and insulin enhance
    memory
  • drugs that increase acetylcholine activity
    increase some aspects of memory
  • diet rich in antioxidants
  • block Aß42 production, inoculate with small
    amounts of Aß42

30
Aplysia and the Study of Learning
31 of 40
  • D.O. Hebb proposed that when an axon successfully
    stimulates a cell it will be even more successful
    in the future
  • Aplysia, a marine invertebrate, is a popular
    experimental animal
  • has few neurons and it is easy to study behavior
    change as a result of neuronal activity
  • touch results in the withdrawal of the siphon,
    mantle or gill
  • often study the withdrawal response and learning

31
Aplysia and the Study of Learning cont
32 of 40
  • Habituation
  • after repeated stimulation of gills the sensory
    neuron no longer increases action potentials to
    stimulate motor neuron
  • Sensitization
  • intense stimulus anywhere on skin excites
    facilitating neuron to release serotonin onto
    presynaptic terminals of sensory and excitatory
    neurons, prolonging neurotransmitter release
  • Thus, changes in synaptic activity produces
    behavioral plasticity, i.e., change due to
    learning

32
Figure 13.19
33 of 40
  • Figure 13.19 Sensitization of the withdrawal
    response in Aplysia. Stimulation of the sensory
    neuron ordinarily excites the motor neuron,
    partly by a direct path and partly by stimulation
    of an excitatory interneuron. Stimulation of a
    facilitating interneuron releases serotonin to
    the presynaptic receptors on the sensory neuron,
    blocking potassium channels and thereby
    prolonging the release of neurotransmitter. This
    effect can be long-lasting. (Source After Kandel
    Schwartz, 1982.)

33
Long-term Potentiation (LTP) and Depression (LTD)
34 of 40
  • LTP a burst of stimulation from axons, e.g., 100
    excitations per second for 1-4 seconds onto
    dendrites results in potentiated synapses for
    minutes, days or weeks
  • specificity only active synapses become
    strengthened
  • cooperativity nearly simultaneous stimulation by
    two or more axons results in LTP
  • associativity pairing a weak input with a strong
    input enhances later response to the weak input
  • LTD prolonged decrease in response to a synaptic
    input where two or more axons have been active
    together at 1-4 times per second

34
Biochemical Mechanisms of LTP in Hippocampus
35 of 40
  • AMPA and NMDA receptors are involved in LTP
  • glutamate receptors that open channels in
    postsynaptic neurons to let in one or more kinds
    of ions (ionotropic)
  • AMPA receptors glutamate opens sodium channels
  • similar to what we have studied

35
Biochemical Mechanisms of LTP in Hippocampus cont.
36 of 40
  • NMDA receptors normally blocked by magnesium but
    responds to glutamate when depolarized by AMPA
    receptors
  • calcium enters and activates protein CaMKII,
    which is necessary for LTP, and sets several
    processes in motion
  • structure of AMPA receptors change, becoming more
    responsive to glutamate
  • some NMDA receptors change to AMPA receptors and
    increase their responsiveness to glutamate
  • dendrites may build more AMPA receptors and make
    more branches
  • Once established, LTP no longer depends on NMDA
    synapses

36
Figure 13.21
37 of 40
  • Figure 13.21 The AMPA and NMDA receptors during
    LTP. If one or (better) more AMPA receptors have
    been repeatedly stimulated, enough sodium enters
    to largely depolarize the dendrites membrane.
    Doing so displaces the magnesium ions and
    therefore enables glutamate to stimulate the NMDA
    receptor. Both sodium and calcium enter through
    the NMDA receptors channel.

37
Biochemical Mechanisms of LTP in Hippocampus cont.
38 of 40
  • Presynaptic changes
  • stimulation of the postsynaptic cell releases a
    retrograde transmitter that feeds back to
    presynaptic cell
  • increases presynaptic release of neurotransmitter
    and production of GAP-43, facilitating growth of
    axons
  • Consolidation of LTP
  • following training, LTP seen in hippocampus
    quickly and in cerebral cortex 90-180 minutes
    later
  • drugs that block NMDA receptors within 2 weeks of
    training also block consolidation of long-term
    memory
  • but, other studies found blocking NMDA for first
    week prolonged LTP and increased dendritic
    branching

38
LTP and Behavior
39 of 40
  • Neurons change early in training, a preliminary
    step before behavioral change
  • Research with mice
  • abnormal NMDA receptors impair learning
  • more than normal NMDA receptors enhances learning
  • drugs that block LTP block learning while drugs
    that facilitate LTP facilitate learning
  • a lack of AMPA receptors creates deficits in LTP
    and memory
  • over production of GAP-43 enhances learning and
    problem solving

39
LTP and Behavior cont.
40 of 40
  • Can drugs improve your memory?
  • gingko biloba sometimes produces small benefits
    in Alzheimers patients or others with
    circulatory problems
  • no research on combination of memory-boosting
    supplements
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