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Memory and Cognition

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Memory and Cognition PSY 324 Topic 2: Cognition and the Brain Dr. Ellen Campana Arizona State University – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Memory and Cognition


1
Memory and Cognition
  • PSY 324
  • Topic 2 Cognition and the Brain
  • Dr. Ellen Campana
  • Arizona State University

2
A Brain
  • Gray White Matter
  • Solid tissue
  • Made up of neurons
  • Golgi showed by staining slices with dye

3
Neurons
  • Similarities with other cells of the body
  • Have a nucleus containing DNA
  • Surrounded by a cell membrane
  • Contain mitochondria and other organelles
  • Do basic cell stuff (protein synthesis, energy
    production)
  • Unique characteristics
  • Do not reproduce
  • Structure, function, chemicals (details to come)

4
Structure of a Neuron
5
Structure of a Neuron
6
Varieties of neurons
  • Function transmit information to other cells
  • Sensory / Afferent neurons info TOWARD CNS
  • Motor / Efferent neurons info AWAY from CNS
  • Interneurons info to other neurons in the CNS

7
Info Transmission Simple Story
  • Neurons are transducers convert environmental
    energy to electrical energy (starting with
    receptors)
  • Energy is propagated from the dendrites into the
    cell body.
  • Energy is propagated to the end of the axon. When
    it goes above a threshold, it triggers the
    release of neurotransmitters into the synapse
  • The neurotransmitters in the synapse trigger the
    same process (or a different one) in the next cell

8
Synapses
9
Info Transmission Deeper Story
  • Background concepts from physics
  • Matter composed of molecules (always moving)
  • Molecules can have /- charge
  • Like charges repel, opposite charges attract



-
-

-
10
Info Transmission Deeper Story
  • Each neuron has a resting potential, the voltage
    difference across the cell membrane, caused by
    the chemicals inside/outside the cell when the
    cell is not firing

11
Info Transmission Deeper Story
  • Axon lined with ion channels (sodium channels,
    potassium channels) that open and close during an
    action potential to propagate the signal
  • Depolarization phase Sodium (Na) Channels
  • Repolarization phase Potassium (K) Channels

12
Depolarization Phase
13
Depolarization Repolarization
14
Info Transmission Deeper Story
  • Action potential moves down the axon, as gates
    open and close in sequence

15
Synapses
  • Action Potential reaches the end of the axon,
    triggering release of neurotransmitters
  • Excitatory neurotransmitters increase firing rate
    in next neuron
  • Inhibitory neurotransmitters decrease firing rate
    in next neuron
  • NOTE Other neurotransmitters do other things
    (less well understood, less relevant to
    cognition, especially to models we will talk
    about)

16
Method Single-Cell Recording
  • It is possible to record activity of a single
    cell
  • Tiny wires (called microelectrodes) stuck into
    axon, attached to oscilloscope for data display
  • Time is a factor
  • De/Repolarization cycle 1/1000 S or 1 ms
  • Activities of cognition take at least 100ms at
    that resolution action potentials show up as
    spikes
  • Often most useful to talk about firing rate

17
Method Single-Cell Recording
  • Pictures of spikes
  • http//viperlib.york.ac.uk/ , keyword single cell
    recording
  • Video clip from Hubel Weisel (they got the 1981
    Nobel Prize in physiology and medicine for this
    work)
  • http//viperlib.york.ac.uk/ , keyword single-cell
    recording

18
History of Single-Cell Recording
  • Participants in experiments
  • 1880s People injured by accident with exposed
    brains, also patients with epilepsy
  • 1950s Fully anesthetized animals (cats,
    squirrels, monkeys, apes)
  • 1980s Awake, active monkeys and apes
  • Invasive, destructive procedure
  • Data there is a cell in the animal that
    increases firing under conditions

19
Value of Single-Cell Recording
  • By itself, the data doesnt tell us much
  • Can find cells that do almost anything
  • The value of single-cell recording for
    understanding human cognition depends on
  • Functional organization of the brain
  • Consistencies of organization within species
  • Meaningful mapping from animal models to
    organization of human brain
  • Fortunately, much evidence that these exist

20
Clarification from last time
  • Question came up about diffusion and connection
    to neuron behavior

21
Clarification from last time
  • Background concepts from physics
  • Matter composed of molecules (always moving)
  • Molecules can have /- charge
  • Like charges repel, opposite charges attract



-
-

-
22
Clarification from last time
  • Background concepts from physics
  • Matter composed of molecules (always moving)
  • Molecules can have /- charge
  • Like charges repel, opposite charges attract
  • Cell membrane maintains an imbalance
  • At rest, negative inside and positive outside
    (pumps maintain)
  • Ion channels open / close quickly
  • Particles rush in / out (like a hole in a boat)
  • Sodium and Potassium are , but other chemicals
    create the negativity inside the axon at rest
  • Focus on Sodium and Potassium because of the gates

23
Clarification from last time
Axon Cell membrane (imbalance) Diffusion and
charge drive the process cells rush
in/out There are mechanical pumps but they just
restore resting potential at the end
24
Clarification from last time
  • Things to note
  • All action potentials are the same size, in terms
    of voltage (all-or-nothing principle)
  • Most useful to think of them as on / off, or to
    think about firing rates (spikes per second)

These are from a specific study. Neuron A
responds when the stimulus is ON. Neuron B
responds when the stimulus is OFF. Neuron C
responds to changes in the stimulus.
25
Why study neurons?
  • Everything we see, hear, do, smell, remember,
    taste, touch, pay attention to, and think about
    is represented physiologically by neurons firing
  • All sensations, perceptions and thoughts are
    neural activation
  • All of our actions arise from neural signals
  • Study of cognition is about both physiological
    and functional models
  • Increasingly uses brain imaging and neuroscience
    methods (later today)

26
Brain Organization
  • Hierarchical Structure
  • Smallest unit Neuron
  • Neurons form Circuits (many levels)
  • Convergence, Inhibition, Excitation
  • Related circuits contribute to localized function
  • Brain areas for different functions
  • Hemispheric specialization

27
Neurons as part of circuits
  • Neural processing occurs when neurons synapse
    together to form a neural circuit
  • Convergence
  • Interaction of excitation and inhibition

28
Neurons as part of circuits
  • Neural processing occurs when neurons synapse
    together to form a neural circuit
  • Convergence
  • Interaction of excitation and inhibition

29
Hubel Weisel
  • Single-cell recording of feature detectors
  • Simple neurons (from the video last time)
  • Orientation (thickness, location of line)
  • Complex neurons
  • Orientation, direction of motion
  • End-stopped
  • Length, direction of motion

30
Feature Detectors
  • Lines (shapes and orientations)
  • Directed Motion
  • Complex Stimuli
  • Geometrical figures
  • Common objects in the environment (houses,
    man-made objects, birds)
  • Faces
  • Depend on selectivity neurons firing at some
    times and not at others

31
Neural Codes in Daily Life
  • Consider the case of recognizing the face of a
    specific person how could that happen?
  • Hypothesis 1 specificity tuning a particular
    neuron could selectively fire when you see that
    person

32
Specificity Coding
  • Difficulties with Specificity Coding Hypothesis
  • Too many different faces, concepts, etc. to have
    a neuron for each one
  • Depends on experience would have to learn each
    face (because neurons dont reproduce)
  • Neurons selective for faces are active for many
    different faces
  • Related idea Grandmother cell (coined by
    Lettvin)
  • Cell responds to image of a grandmother, general
    concept of grandmothers, your own grandmother
  • Some evidence that these might exist in
    Hippocampus associated with memory storage, not
    vision
  • For recognition (and many other types of
    cognition), specificity coding is not enough

33
Neural Codes in Daily Life
  • Hypothesis 2 Distibuted Coding code for a
    specific face is distributed across a set of
    neurons

34
Distributed Coding
  • Advantages
  • Efficient -- firing of fewer neurons can
    represent many more different stimuli
  • Similar items can have similar neural codes
  • Helps with learning
  • Graceful degradation -- if one or two neurons do
    not fire, it is still possible to recognize a
    face

35
Reconciling types of coding
  • Evidence for Specificity Coding
  • Feature detectors
  • Concept cells in hippocampus (memory area)
  • Argument for Distributed Coding in recognition
  • Clear theoretical advantages in recognition
  • Will see a lot of evidence later
  • Both are happening in the brain in different
    areas at the same time (parallel processing)
  • Pattern across ( interaction btwn)
    areascognition

36
The Whole Brain
  • Localization of function - Different parts of the
    brain serve different functions
  • Many, many ways to divide the brain
  • Like an onion, many layers
  • Like a fractal, the closer you look the more
    complex it seems
  • Descriptions may seem contradictory and/or
    overlapping because of this

37
Cerebral Cortex
  • Most important for Cognition

38
Cerebral Cortex
  • Temporal Lobe
  • Language
  • Memory
  • Hearing
  • Perceiving forms
  • Occipital Lobe
  • Visual information (early processing) feature
    detectors

39
Cerebral Cortex
  • Parietal Lobe
  • Touch
  • Vision
  • Attention
  • Frontal Lobe
  • Proportionately larger in humans than in other
    species
  • Language
  • Thought
  • Memory
  • Motor functioning

40
Subcortical Structures
41
Subcortical Structures
  • Hippocampus
  • Forming memories
  • Amygdala
  • Emotions, emotional memories
  • Thalamus
  • Processing sensory information (vision, hearing,
    touch)

42
Hemispheres
  • Brain separated into sides (hemispheres)
  • Corpus Collosum connects them
  • Structurally and functionally very similar
  • Lateralization specific functions occurring in
    one hemisphere or the other

Note Sperry studied split-brain patients, who
had had their corpus collosum severed as a
treatment for epilepsy. He shared Hubel
Weisels Nobel Prize for this work.
43
Lateralization
  • Vision of left part of the world lateralized to
    the right side (opposite also true)
  • Motor Control of left side of body lateralized to
    the right side (opposite also true)
  • Touch on left side of body lateralized to the
    right side (opposite also true)

44
Lateralization
  • Are there right-brained and left-brained
    people?
  • Analytical/Logical processing (syntax of
    language) usually on the left side (not always)
  • Analogy and Broad Thinking usually on the right
    side (not always)
  • Everyone has (and uses) both
  • Patients who have had a hemispherectomy
  • Other side usually takes over missing
    functionality
  • Coglab Brain Assymetry

45
Localized Function
  • Parietal Lobe
  • Sensory Homunculus (near the front, somatosensory
    cortex)
  • Motor Homunculus (near the back, motor cortex)

46
Sensory Homunculus
Each side of the brain has a copy, which
processes touch from the other side
47
Localized Function
  • Parietal Lobe
  • Sensory Homunculus (near the front, somatosensory
    cortex)
  • Motor Homunculus (near the back, motor cortex)
  • Temporal Lobe
  • Wernickes Area metaphor, meaning in language
  • Brocas Area logical structure of language
  • Fusiform Face Area (FFA) specialized for faces
    (or is it things were experts at recognizing???)

48
Researching Localized Function
  • Neuropsychology comparing patients with
    localized brain damage
  • Single dissociation single patient has some
    things impaired, other things not impaired

49
Single Dissociation Phineas Gage
  • Construction accident 1848
  • Harlow (doctor) wrote a lot about his condition
  • Gage lived, could talk, act, and do all normal
    activities, but suffered impairment of emotional,
    social, and personal traits
  • Evidence for some separation of language and
    social traits, etc.

50
Researching Localized Function
  • Neuropsychology comparing patients with
    localized brain damage
  • Single dissociation single patient has some
    things impaired, other things not impaired
  • Alice Short-Term Memory OK, Long-Term Memory
    impaired (like in Memento)
  • Double dissociation -- two (or more) patients
    show opposite single impairments
  • Bert Long-Term Memory OK, Short-Term Memory
    impaired

51
Double Dissociation
Short-term memory Long-term memory
Alice (temporal lobe damage) OK Impaired
Bert (frontal lobe damage Impaired OK
52
Double Dissociation
Naming Living Things Naming Nonliving Things
Group 1 (damage to area 1) OK Impaired
Group 2 (damage to area 2) Impaired OK
53
What can we conclude?
  • Double dissociation
  • Two functions involve different mechanisms
  • Two functions involve different brain areas
  • Mechanisms are independent
  • Single dissociation
  • Two functions involve different mechanisms
  • Two functions involve different brain areas
  • Mechanisms may not be independent

54
Limitations of Neuropsychology
  • At least for human processing, brain damage comes
    about from natural means (accident, etc.)
  • Members of groups rarely have exactly the same
    damage (location or extent)
  • No record of processing or brain organization
    before the damage
  • Difficult to assess all possible types of
    functional impairment
  • Damage may cause reorganization (plasticity)

55
Imaging Methods
  • EEG- Electrodes on outside of head continuously
    measure electrical activity
  • PET- Radioactive dye injected, accumulates in
    different regions over time and can be read by a
    scanner. Essentially measures metabolism of
    neurons
  • fMRI- Brief magnetic pulses used to give a
    snapshot of ratio of oxygenated to deoxygenated
    blood (metabolism)
  • TMS- New measure. Magnetic field can disable
    specific portions of the brain for a short time,
    simulating damage.
  • Temporal resolution Detail with respect to time
  • Spatial Resolution Detail with respect to
    physiology

56
Image from an fMRI scan
Image from a PET scan
57
Imaging Methods
Spatial Resolution Temporal Resolution
EEG Poor Good
PET Excellent Poor
fMRI Good Good
TMS Good Good
58
Subtraction Technique
Visual Stimulus (light flashing)
Visual Stimulus (light flashing)
  • Used for fMRI studies
  • Method similar to Donders study
  • Compared two situations that included different
    cognitive processes
  • Data blood glucose level
  • Relative measure

Perception of the light
Perception of the light
DECISION
Response
Response
59
Subtraction Technique
  • Activation in control condition is subtracted
    from experimental condition to get activity due
    to stimulation in the experimental condition

60
Effects of experience
  • Experience-dependant plasticity
  • Developmental environment can affect neuron
    specialization
  • Kittens raised in environment with only vertical
    lines had more of their brain devoted to
    recognizing vertical lines in adulthood (and none
    devoted to horizontal)
  • Learning happens through changes in connections
    and relationships between neurons, even in
    adulthood
  • Greebles study (back to the FFA)

61
Greebles
  • Recall discussion of localization of function
  • Fusiform Face Area (FFA) was an area in the
    Temporal lobe devoted to recognizing faces or
    was it things were experts at recognizing???
  • Kanwisher has demonstrated, using fMRI, that the
    area does selectively respond to faces
  • Gauthier and colleagues showed fMRI evidence for
    experience-based plasticity in this area
    (Greebles study)

62
Greebles Study
  • Step 1 measure brain activity in FFA when
    viewing Greebles
  • Step 2 train people to recognize individual
    Greebles and families of Greebles
  • Step 3 measure brain activity in FFA when
    viewing Greebles
  • Analysis compare activity in FFA before and
    after training

63
Greebles Study
  • Conclusions
  • Plasticity of FFA
  • FFA selects for things were experts about
  • Faces are things were experts about
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