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Relational Learning and Amnesia

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Title: Chapter 14 Author: Laura J Farnbauch Last modified by: Self Serve Created Date: 5/19/2005 3:21:27 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Relational Learning and Amnesia


1
Chapter 14
  • Relational Learning and Amnesia

2
Human Anterograde Amnesia
  • Anterograde amnesia - difficulty in learning new
    information, due to head injury or certain
    degenerative brain diseases pure form is rare
  • Retrograde amnesia inability to remember events
    that occurred prior to brain damage
  • Korsakoffs syndrome permanent anterograde
    amnesia caused by brain damage resulting from
    chronic alcoholism or malnutrition (due to
    thiamine deficiency) also have confabulations
    (reporting of memories that did not occur,
    without the intention to deceive)
  • Anterograde amnesia can be caused by damage to
    temporal lobes
  • e.g. patient H.M. bilateral removal of medial
    temporal lobe to alleviate epilepsy resulted in
    severe anterograde amnesia

3
Human Anterograde Amnesia
  • Basic description
  • Results from study with H.M.
  • The hippocampus is not the location of long-term
    memory (LTM) nor is it necessary for the
    retrieval of LTM
  • The hippocampus is not the location for
    short-term memory (STM)
  • The hippocampus is involved in converting STM
    into LTM
  • These results are too simple anterograde amnesia
    is actually much more complex
  • Learning consists of at least 2 stages
  • STM immediate memory for events, which may or
    may not be consolidated into LTM can only hold a
    limited amount of info
  • LTM relatively stable memory of events that
    occurred in the more distant past, as opposed to
    STM no limit on amount of info
  • Consolidation the process by which STM are
    converted into LTM

4
Simple model of memory process
  • Sensory info enters STM
  • Rehearsal keeps that info in STM
  • Eventually, info will move into LTM via
    consolidation

5
Human Anterograde Amnesia
  • Spared learning abilities
  • Still capable of
  • Perceptual learning
  • e.g. recognize broken drawings also faces and
    melodies
  • Stimulus-response learning
  • Can acquire a classical conditioned eyeblink
    response
  • Motor learning
  • Mirror drawing task subjects required to trace
    the outline of a figure while looking at the
    figure in a mirror

6
Human Anterograde Amnesia
  • Declarative and nondeclarative memories
  • Although patients can learn other tasks, they
    cannot recall ever learning them
  • Learning and memory involve different processes
  • 2 major categories of memories
  • Declarative memories memory that can be
    verbally expressed, such as memory for events,
    facts, or specific stimuli this is impaired with
    anterograde amnesia
  • Nondeclarative memories memory whose formation
    does not depend on the hippocampal formation a
    collective term for perceptual,
    stimulus-response, and motor memory not affected
    by anterograde amnesia these control behavior
    cannot always be described in words

7
Human Anterograde Amnesia
  • Failure of relational learning
  • Verbal learning is disrupted in anterograde
    amnesia
  • e.g. H.M. did not learn any new words after his
    surgery (biodegradable two grades)
  • Episodic memories most complex form of
    declarative memory memory of a collection of
    perceptions of events organized in time and
    identified by a particular context
  • e.g. explain what you did this morning after
    waking up
  • The hippocampal formation enables us to learn the
    relationship b/t the stimuli that were present at
    the time of an event (i.e. context) and then
    events themselves

8
Human Anterograde Amnesia
  • Anatomy of anterograde amnesia
  • Damage to the hippocampus or to regions that
    supply its inputs and receive its outputs causes
    anterograde amnesia
  • The most important input to the hippocampal
    formation is the entorhinal cortex, which
    receives inputs from the limbic cortex either
    directly or via the perirhinal cortex or the
    parahippocampal cortex
  • How does the hippocampus form new declarative
    memories?
  • Hippocampus receives info about what is going on
    from sensory and motor assc. cortex and from some
    subcortical regions
  • It processes this info and then modifies the
    memories being consolidated by efferent
    connections back to these regions
  • Experiences that lead to declarative memories
    activate the hippocampal formation
  • Patient R.B., suffered brain damage that lead to
    anterograde amnesia after autopsy, found that
    field CA1 of the hippocampal formation was
    completely destroyed

9
Limbic cortex
10
Human Anterograde Amnesia
  • Anatomy of anterograde amnesia
  • Damage to other subcortical regions that connect
    with the hippocampus can cause memory impairments
  • Limbic cortex of the medial temporal lobe
  • Semantic memories a memory of facts and general
    info different from episodic memory
  • Destruction of hippocampus alone disrupts
    episodic memory only must have damage to limbic
    cortex of medial temporal lobe to also impair
    semantic memory (and thus all declarative memory)
  • Fornix and mammillary bodies
  • Patients with Korsakoffs syndrome suffer
    degeneration of the mammillary bodies
  • Most of the efferent axons of the fornix
    terminate in the mammillary bodies
  • Damage to any part of the neural circuit that
    includes the hippocampus, fornix, mammillary
    bodies and anterior thalamus cause memory
    impairments

11
Human Anterograde Amnesia
  • Role of the medial temporal lobe in spatial
    memory
  • Individuals with anterograde amnesia are unable
    to consolidate info about the location of rooms,
    corridors, buildings, roads, and other important
    items in their envt
  • Bilateral medial temporal lobe lesions produce
    the most profound impairment on spatial memory,
    but enough damage to only the R hemisphere is
    sufficient
  • R hippocampal formation is activated when a
    person is remembering or performing a
    navigational task
  • Damage to this area also impairs ability to learn
    spatial arrangement of objects

12
Human Anterograde Amnesia
  • Role of the medial temporal lobe in memory
    retrieval
  • The hippocampal formation and its related
    structures also play a role in memory retrieval
  • Anterograde amnesia is usually accompanied by
    retrograde amnesia brain damage can either cause
    loss of memories or loss of access to memories
  • However, if damage is only limited to field CA1,
    patients do not show additional retrograde
    amnesia
  • Semantic dementia loss of semantic memories
    caused by progressive degeneration of the
    neocortex of the lateral temporal lobes
  • Impairment for meaning of words, and functions of
    common objects

13
Human Anterograde Amnesia
  • Confabulation
  • May be a result of disruption of the normal
    functions of the prefrontal cortex
  • Frontal lobes may be involved in distinguishing
    b/t real and imaginary memories may do this by
    helping us to distinguish items with general
    familiarity from specific items we have
    encountered before

14
Relational learning in lab animals
  • Lab animals with hippocampal formation lesions do
    not sow impairment in stimulus-response learning,
    but with relational learning tasks
  • Remembering places visited
  • Radial maze task food placed at end of each
    arm, rats did not go down arm that they had
    already collected food from lesions to
    hippocampus, fornix, or entorhinal cortex
    impaired this task animals must remember which
    arm they have collected from that exact day (as
    opposed to another testing day)

15
Relational learning in lab animals
  • Spatial perception and learning
  • Lab animals with hippocampal lesions show
    problems with navigational tasks just as humans
    do
  • Morris water maze task requires rat to find a
    particular location in the water drum, by means
    of visual cues external to the apparatus if rats
    wit hippocampal lesions are released from same
    position every testing time, they perform fine
    (e.g. S-R learning), but if they are started from
    a different place, they cannot complete the task
    correctly (e.g. relational learning)

16
Relational learning in lab animals
  • Spatial perception and learning
  • Hippocampal lesions disrupt performance of homing
    pigeons
  • Hippocampal formation of animals that normally
    store seeds or food in hidden caches and later
    retrieve them is larger than that in animals
    without this ability
  • Role of hippocampal formation in memory
    consolidation
  • Brain activity in the hippocampus is increased in
    mice learning a spatial task however, after 25
    days of testing, the activity there decreases,
    suggesting that the hippocampus is involved in
    consolidating spatial memories for only a limited
    time

17
Relational learning in lab animals
  • Place cells in the hippocampal formation
  • When recording the activity of individual neurons
    in the hippocampus of an animals moving around
    its envt, some neurons fired at a high rate only
    when the rat was in a particular location
  • The suggests evidence that different neurons have
    different spatial receptive fields (i.e. they
    responded when the animals were in different
    locations) these neurons were named place cells
  • When placed on a circular platform that is
    rotated slowly within a larger chamber, rats will
    ignore local cues and orient themselves to face a
    cue card the place cells however, oriented
    themselves to the local cues
  • When animals encounter new envts, they learn the
    layout and maps become established in their
    hippocampus an animals location within each
    envt is encoded by the pattern of firing of
    these neurons
  • Place cells are guided by both visual stimuli and
    internal stimuli (e.g. proprioceptive feedback)
  • Hippocampus receives spatial info via the
    entorhinal cortex

18
Relational learning in lab animals
  • Role of LTP in relational learning
  • When place cells become active when an animal is
    present in a particular location, this causes
    changes in the excitability of neurons in the
    hippocampal formation
  • Knockout mice for NMDA receptors specific for the
    field CA1 no establishment of LTP in field CA1,
    smaller and less focused spatial receptive
    fields, and learn Morris water maze task much
    slower
  • NMDA mediated LTP appears to be required for the
    consolidation of spatial receptive fields in
    field CA1 pyramidal cells but not their
    short-term establishment
  • Modulation of hippocampal functions
  • Hippocampal formation receives input from ACh,
    NE, DA, and 5-HT neurons
  • They appear to control the information-processing
    functions of the hippocampal formation
  • 5-HT has suppressive effect on establishment of
    LTP in hipp. form.

19
Relational learning in lab animals
  • Modulation of hippocampal functions (cont)
  • NE has a facilitator effect, particularly on
    synapses of terminals of entorhinal neurons of
    the dentate gyrus
  • DA had excitatory effects on LTP and
    memory-related functions of the hippocampal
    formation
  • Synaptic plasticity is induced by simultaneous
    depolarization of hippocampal neurons and
    activation of DA receptors on these neurons
  • ACh neurons from medial septum project to
    hippocampus via fornix activity of these neurons
    is responsible for hippocampal theta rhythms
    (medium amplitude, medium frequency waves) that
    influence the establishment of LTP in the
    hippocampus
  • If theta activity is disrupted, animals show
    deficits in learning tasks that are affected by
    hippocampal lesions
  • Theta behaviors exploration or investigation
  • Nontheta behaviors alert immobility, drinking,
    self-directed behaviors
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