Memory Flashcards

(30 cards)

1
Q

H.M. - The Pivotal Case

A

His medial temporal lobectomy showed that specific brain structures are critical for memory, revealed different memory types (explicit vs. implicit), and identified memory consolidation as a key process.

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2
Q

H.M.’s Surgery & Core Deficit

A

A medial temporal lobectomy (removing hippocampus, amygdala). His core deficit was severe anterograde amnesia – the inability to form new explicit long-term memories.

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3
Q

Retrograde vs. Anterograde Amnesia

A

Retrograde: Cannot remember events before the brain damage.

Anterograde: Cannot form new memories after the brain damage.

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4
Q

Explicit vs. Implicit Memory

A

Explicit: Memory you can declare (facts, events). H.M. lost this.

Implicit: Memory you show (skills, habits). H.M. retained this.

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5
Q

Episodic vs. Semantic Memory

A

Episodic: Autobiographical, personal experiences (your last birthday).

Semantic: General knowledge and facts (knowing Paris is the capital of France).

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6
Q

Cerebral Global Ischemia

A

A reduction in blood supply to the brain (e.g., from a heart attack). The CA1 region of the hippocampus is highly vulnerable, leading to memory problems.

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7
Q

Korsakoff’s Syndrome Cause & Symptoms

A

Cause: Thiamine (B1) deficiency, often from chronic alcoholism.

Symptoms: Anterograde amnesia early on, progressing to retrograde amnesia in late stages.

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8
Q

Korsakoff’s Syndrome Brain Damage

A

Medial diencephalon (medial thalamus & hypothalamus). Diffuse damage can also occur in the neocortex, hippocampus, and cerebellum.

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9
Q

Alzheimer’s Disease - Key Features

A

Features: Progressive memory loss, especially for new info (anterograde amnesia), without initial dementia.

Regions: Basal forebrain (reduced acetylcholine), medial temporal lobe, and prefrontal cortex.

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10
Q

Post-Traumatic Amnesia (PTA)

A

Amnesia from closed-head injury (e.g., concussion). Characterized by:

Intact short-term memory but impaired long-term memory formation.

Islets of memory: Brief, clear flashbacks during the amnesic period.

Duration: Coma < Retrograde Amnesia < Anterograde Amnesia.

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11
Q

Place Cells vs. Grid Cells

A

Place Cells: Fire when an animal is in a specific location (the “place field”).

Grid Cells: Fire in a hexagonal grid pattern across the environment, providing a spatial map for place cells.

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12
Q

Concept Cells

A

Neurons that fire in response to a specific concept (a person, place, object), regardless of how it’s perceived. They create associative networks.

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13
Q

Engram Cells

A

Engram cells : any change in your nervous system that forms as a result from memory formation is an engram.
These cells are involved in maintaining that change and memory.

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14
Q

Inferotemporal Cortex Role

A

Part of the “what” pathway; crucial for recalling visual information and learning relationships between visual stimuli.

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15
Q

Amygdala Role

A

Strengthening the emotional component of memories, especially fear-related memories.

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16
Q

Prefrontal Cortex Role

A

Working memory (e.g., remembering where you parked) and memory for the temporal order of events.

17
Q

Cerebellum Role

A

Motor learning where precise timing is critical (e.g., adapting to a split-belt treadmill).

18
Q

Striatum Role

A

Critical for habit formation and procedural learning for both motor and cognitive activities.

19
Q

Memory Consolidation & Reconsolidation

A

Consolidation: The initial process of stabilizing a memory from short-term to long-term storage.

Reconsolidation: The process of re-stabilizing a memory after it is recalled, allowing it to be updated or strengthened.

20
Q

Long-Term Potentiation (LTP)

A

A long-lasting strengthening of synaptic connections following high-frequency stimulation. It is the primary cellular model for learning and memory.

21
Q

Key Requirement to Induce LTP

A

Co-occurrence (Associativity): The presynaptic neuron and postsynaptic neuron must be activated at the same time.

Glutamate binding to AMPA and NMDA receptors is essential for LTP because it depolarizes the postsynaptic neuron, removes the Mg²⁺ block from NMDA receptors, allows Ca²⁺ influx, and triggers the molecular changes that strengthen the synapse.

22
Q

NMDA Receptors & LTP

A

They are the “coincidence detectors.” When both glutamate binds (from presynaptic activity) and the postsynaptic neuron is depolarized, the Mg2+ block is removed, allowing Ca2+ to flood in, triggering LTP.

23
Q

Long-Term Depression (LTD)

A

The opposite of LTP; a long-lasting weakening of synaptic connections. It is crucial for clearing old memories and fine-tuning neural circuits.

24
Q

Metaplasticity

A

“Plasticity of plasticity.” It refers to how the history of a synapse’s activity influences its future capacity to undergo LTP or LTD.

25
26
What are the differences between anterograde and retrograde amnesia.?
1. Retrograde amnesia: cannot remember events prior to brain damage. 2. Anterograde amnesia: complete loss of forming new explicit long term memory.
27
Describe the divisions and subdivisions of long-term memory.
Long term memory is divided into 2: Declarative or explicit memory: Things you can tell others Procedural or implicit memory: Thing that you must show others Declarative memory is divided into: episodic(info about yourself, biographical ) and semantic (knowing general info)
28
What are the neural correlates of amnesia in Korsakoff's Syndrome and Alzheimer's disease?
Korsakoff's correlate = Medial Diencephalon / Mediodorsal Thalamus Alzheimer's correlate = Basal Forebrain, Medial Temporal Lobes, Prefrontal Cortex
29
What happens after a closed-head traumatic brain injury?
The amnesia following a closed-head TBI is called **posttraumatic amnesia.** Initial Coma: The injury causes an immediate state of unconsciousness (coma), which can last from seconds to weeks. Period of Confusion: After regaining consciousness, the person experiences a confused state. Permanent Memory Loss: Once the confusion clears, permanent memory problems are revealed, including: Anterograde and retrograde amnesia
30
What is the role of the inferotemporal and prefrontal cortices in memories?
Inferotemporal Cortex: Stores long-term visual memories (e.g., objects, faces) Works with perirhinal cortex in visual memory formation and retrieval Shows reversed activation patterns during memory recall versus learning Prefrontal Cortex: Critical for temporal memory (remembering sequence/order of events) Essential for working memory (maintaining and manipulating information during tasks) Damage causes disorganized memory despite preserved event recall