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The Biology of Learning and Memory

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Title: The Biology of Learning and Memory


1
Chapter 14
  • The Biology of Learning and Memory

2
Learning and Memory Definition
  • Learning
  • A long term change in behavior as a function of
    experiences.
  • Memory
  • The capacity to retain and retrieve past
    experiences.

3
Types of Learning
  • Habituation
  • A decrease in response following repeated
    exposure to a non-threatening stimulus.
  • Sensitization
  • An increase in reactivity to a stimulus following
    exposure to an intense event.
  • Classical (Pavlovian)Conditioning
  • Occurs through associations between an
    environmental stimulus and a naturally occurring
    stimulus.
  • Operant Conditioning
  • Learning that occurs through rewards and
    punishments for behavior.

4
Types of LearningPavlovian Conditioning
  • Learning in which a neutral stimulus is paired
    with a stimulus that elicits a reflex response
    until the neutral stimulus elicits the reflex
    response by itself.
  • Unconditioned stimulus (US) - A stimulus that
    involuntarily elicits a reflexive response.
  • Unconditioned response (UR) - A reflexive
    reaction to an unconditioned stimulus.
  • Conditioned stimulus (CS) - An initially neutral
    stimulus that eventually elicits a conditioned
    response after pairing with a US.
  • Conditioned response (CR) - A learned reaction to
    a CS.

5
Classical Conditioning
6
Types of Learning Operant Conditioning
  • Learning how to behave to obtain reinforcement
  • Reinforcers - events or activities that increase
    the frequency of the behavior that precedes that
    event or activity.
  • Punishers - events or activities that decrease
    the frequency of the behavior that precedes them.
  • Contingency -The specified relationship between a
    behavior and its reinforcement or punishment.

7
Operant Conditioning
8
Models of Memory Storage and Retrieval
Atkinson-Shiffrin model
  • An experience is sequentially stored in the
    sensory register, and the short-term store, and
    the long-term store.

9
Models of Memory Storage and Retrieval
Baddeleys Rehearsal Systems approach
  • An alternative to Atkinson-Shiffrin in which
    Baddeley argued that memories go directly from
    the sensory register to long-term storage.

10
Models of Memory Storage and Retrieval Craik and
Lockhart
  • Craik and Lockhart - have a theory that memories
    differ in the extent to which they have been
    processed.

11
Types of Memories
12
Types of Memories
13
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14
Declarative Memory
  • Memory whose formation does depend on the
    hippocampal formation
  • Memory that can be verbally expressed
  • Episodic memory
  • Semantic memory
  • Spatial memory
  • Slow-wave sleep facilitates consolidation of
    declarative memories

15
The Anatomy of Learning and Memory Declarative
Memory
  • Squire and others have identified areas of the
    brain involved in declarative memory.
  • Medial temporal lobe - Hippocampus and
    surrounding cortical areas relay information to
    diencephalic areas where it is processed and
    relayed to the frontal lobe.
  • Frontal lobe - Medial temporal lobe structures
    and the medial thalamus jointly may be essential
    for the formation of long-term memory
  • connections between these structures and the
    frontal lobe may provide a route by which
    memories can influence behavior.

16
Role of the Hippocampus
  • Input from motor and sensory association cortexes
    and from subcortical regions such as basal
    ganglia and amygdala
  • Through efferent connections with these regions
    modifies the memories being consolidated there,
    linking them together
  • A gradual process controlled by the hippocampus
    transforms memories into long term storage in the
    frontal cortex
  • Before process completes, hippocampus is
    necessary for retrieval

17
Procedural Memory
  • Memory whose formation does not depend on the
    hippocampal formation
  • Collective term for stimulus-response,
    perceptual, and motor memory
  • Non-declarative memories control behaviors
  • Learning to drive, type
  • REM sleep facilitates retention
  • of non-declarative memories
  • Ian Waterman

18
Perceptual Learning
  • Learning to recognize stimuli occurs when
    synaptic changes take place in the appropriate
    regions of the sensory cortex that establish new
    neural circuits
  • Learning to recognize sensory stimuli
  • Primary visual cortex
  • Ventral stream object recognition
  • Dorsal stream object location
  • Other sensory information activate similar areas
    of the association cortices

19
Perceptual Short-term memory
  • Activates the circuits and continues after the
    stimuli disappears
  • Successfully remembering short-term is a two step
    process
  • Filter out irrelevant information
  • Maintain relevant information
  • Also in prefrontal cortex
  • Manipulate and organize
  • Strategies for retrieval
  • Delayed matching-to-sample task
  • Faces fusiform face area face blindness
  • Places parahippocampal place area

20
The Anatomy of Learning and Memory Procedural
Memory
  • Procedural or nondeclarative memory involves the
    neocortex and neostriatum.
  • Basal ganglia structures (caudate nucleus and
    putamen) needed for
  • procedural learning
  • Classical conditioning
  • of reflexes depends
  • on the cerebellum.

21
(Budson Price, 2009)
22
The Memory Consolidation ProcessHebbs Cell
Assemblies
  • Cell assembly - A circuit of neurons that become
    active at the same time serves as the site of
    permanent memory.
  • Reverberatory activity - The continued
    reactivation of a neural circuit following an
    experience.
  • Reverberatory activity is followed by
    physiological changes that produce a relatively
    permanent record of the event.
  • Phase sequence - interconnected cell assemblies
    all activated at the same time in order to
    control complex processes.

23
Is Reverberatory Activity Essential for Memory
Storage?
  • Studies have used electroconvulsive shock to
    break up the consolidation of memory.
  • ECS tends to produce retrograde amnesia
    supporting the idea that reverberatory activity
    is necessary for memory consolidation.
  • CS reminders have brought back memories
    apparently lost after ECS
  • Therefore, forms of brain intervention affect
    memory retrieval rather than consolidation.

24
The Cellular Basis of Learning and Memory
  • Cellular Modification Theory the view that
    learning permanently enhances the functioning of
    existing neural circuits or establishes new
    neural connections.
  • Kandels studies of learning in Aplysia
    californica indicated both habituation and
    sensitization exist in this animal.
  • Normal classical conditioning occurs in Alypsia
    with a CS of a light touch to the mantle or
    siphon paired with an electric shock to the tail.

25
Structural Changes and Storing Experiences
  • Experience enhances Ca2 ion entry into the
    hippocampus (Lynch, 1986).
  • Exposing more glutamate receptors to stimulation
    from other neurons, making the postsynaptic
    neuron more sensitive.
  • This may eventually cause changes in the terminal
    button and Lynch believes this may be the
    biological basis of learning and memory.

26
The Medial Temporal Lobe
  • H.M. had his medial temporal lobes, including the
    hippocampus, amygdala, and surrounding cortical
    tissue, removed as a treatment for epilepsy.
  • Resulted in severe anterograde amnesia
  • His procedural memory is intact.

PBS Nova Aug 2009 Clive Wearing
27
The Importance of the Hippocampus
  • Damage to the hippocampus results in memory
    deficits
  • Case of R.B.
  • hippocampal damage produced profound anterograde
    amnesia
  • Case of H.M. -
  • memories acquired before surgery were retained
    suggesting that the hippocampus is involved in
    the storage of declarative memory but is not the
    site of storage.
  • Some researchers have found episodic encoding in
    the left frontal areas and episodic retrieval in
    the right frontal regions.

28
Long Term Potentiation
  • A long term increase in the excitability of a
    neuron to a particular stimulus due to the
    repeated high-frequency activity of that stimulus
  • A long-lasting strengthening of synapses between
    nerve cells.
  • Long-term memories are thought to be based on LTP
  • Without LTP, learning some skills might be
    difficult or impossible.

29
Characteristics of LTP
  • A brief, sensitizing stimulus is sufficient to
    produce LTP demonstrates that hippocampal
    neurons can change synaptic responsivity
    following a single event.
  • LTP-changed synaptic responsivity is confined to
    a specific neural pathway.
  • LTP can be produced by either a single stimulus
    or by the convergence of stimuli that
    individually would not produce LTP.
  • LTP can last for days or weeks, which suggests
    that it is not just a temporary change in
    synaptic responsivity.

30
Long-Term Potentiation in the Hippocampus
  • Long-term potentiation is an increase in the
    amplitude and duration of EPSPs in response to
    the test stimulus.
  • Three pathways involved in LTP
  • Perforant fiber pathway
  • Mossy fiber pathway
  • Schaffer collateral fiber pathway

31
Characteristics of LTP
  • LTP seems to occur through modification of the
    NMDA receptor in the Perforant and Schaffer
    collateral pathways.
  • This may be a basis for operant and classical
    conditioning.

32
LTP and the NMDA Receptor
  • In the mossy fiber pathway, glutamate binds to
    both the NMDA and non-NMDA receptors.
  • LTP apparently depends not on Ca2 influx into
    the postsynaptic receptor, but on Ca2 influx
    into the presynaptic cell after the LTP-inducing
    stimulus.
  • Kandel refers to this as nonassociative - the
    organism learns about the properties of a single
    stimulus.
  • Habituation and sensitization are examples of
    this type of learning.

33
Neuroplasticity in the Hippocampus
  • Neurogenesis - helps the brain to be modified in
    adaptation to changing environmental conditions.
  • Learning that involves the hippocampus results in
    new cells surviving at a higher rate.
  • The cells become part of neural circuits
    established by a temporal-based learning
    experience.
  • Enriched environments have been shown to increase
    the size of an animals brain, their level of
    cortical ACh, and their learning ability.
  • Studies have shown enriched environments increase
    hippocampal neurogenesis, even in adult
  • animals.

34
The Role of the Mediodorsal Thalamus
  • Mediodorsal thalamus - A brain structure
    associated with profound memory impairment.
  • People with Korsakoffs syndrome often have
    atrophy of cells in the mediodorsal thalamus
    caused by a deficiency of Vitamin B1.
  • Loss of declarative rather than procedural
    memory.
  • Patients are unaware that they dont remember
    make up stories (confabulation) to fill in the
    gaps.
  • Emotion is generally intact with medial temporal
    lobe damage but patients with mediodorsal
    thalamic damage tend to be emotionally flat and
    apathetic

35
Caudate Nucleus-Putamen Memory System
  • Caudate nucleus and putamen control the ability
    to develop procedural memory.

36
The Amygdala and Memory
  • Stimulation of the amygdala results in enhancing
    the memory of a task
  • Inhibition of the amygdala results in decreasing
    the emotional arousal effects on memory.

37
Alzheimers Disease
  • A type of dementia characterized by progressive
    neurological degeneration and a profound
    deterioration of mental functioning.
  • Early onset - before age 65
  • Risk factors include familial clustering of
    cases, increasing
  • age, and Down
  • syndrome.

38
Alzheimers Disease
39
The Cellular Basis of Alzheimers Disease
  • Cellular basis of AD
  • Neurofibrillary tangles
  • Senile plaques
  • Amyloid beta protein

40
Alzheimers DiseaseGenetics
  • There is a link with chromosome 21
  • Another gene identified is ApoE on chromosome 19
  • Some people have one or two ApoE4 alleles and
    have a greater risk of having late-onset AD.
  • The product of ApoE4 is not an effective
    antioxidant for amyloid beta protein as are the
    products of other alleles.
  • This may indicate a need to develop more
    effective methods to increase antioxidants in the
    brains of AD patients.
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