PSYC 365 Lecture 21 Memory consolidation

Pataasin ang iyong marka sa homework at exams ngayon gamit ang Quizwiz!

what did McGaugh's research on people with highly superior autobiographical memory (HSAM) find?

- McGaugh's group studied if HSAM ppl relied on better cognitive abilities in other areas - gave them a ton of other cognitive tests - saw HSAM doesn't come from overall better cognitive function, not just smarter than everyone else - also examined HSAM ppl's memories of actual testing episodes - found HSAM participants recalled details of their own exp way better than smth the experimenter shared - concluded HSAM involves selective recollection of personal autobiographical material -> this is their superpower!

what is multiple trace theory (MTT)?

- episodic memories ALWAYS need the hippocampus - always needed to recall it - system-wide consolidation that SCT talks most about happens with changes in the nature of the memory -> this is called semanticization - memories can become semantic memories once they're represented outside the hippocampus, so these memories don't need the hippocampus - both semantic and episodic memories can exist alongide each other, semantic doesn't have to replace episodic once consolidation happens

how does standard consolidation theory distinguish between types of explicit memory?

- it doesn't! - sees episodic memories (specific details, particular time and place) as the same as semantic memories (less context-specific, more generic, no time attached)

what is a schema?

- mental concept that tells someone what to expect from various situations - eg. know to sit down at a restaurant and wait for a menu - act as scripts that are constructed from exp across ur life - maintained in memory - filters and organizes what we encode based on past exp similar to attention - prior knowledge affects how we memorize and retain future knowledge for long-term storage - but also lets us organize events in time so we can lay down more than a static snapshot, but sensory impressions that happen like the frames of a film - eg. video of two dudes - prefacing the blurb w the announcement that the following info is about washing clothes helps us rmb more - schemas triggered close to learning improve memory

how does multiple trace theory (MTT) explain the loss of memories?

- not all lesioned patients have temporally graded amnesia - pattern of amnesia in those w lots of hippocampal lesions depends on the type of memory tested and the nature of the lesions - lesions are messy! - test of memory that involve semantic memory result in temporal gradient - relates to amount of time that's needed to complete process of transformation - will only have amnesia for recent memories that didn't get transformed, but not older ones that already underwent transformation - but tests for pure hippocampus-dependent episodic memory result in showing non-graded amnesia, doesn't matter how old the memory is

what is standard consolidation theory (SCT)?

- older theory - states memories initially depend on hippocampus, when they're laid down and recalled right after - hippocampus is only involved for a short window of time -> needed to form associations to make coherent memory and keep it for a while, not forever - these memories are later consolidated across other brain regions with time - the memory reorganizes outside of the hippocampus in neocortical structures - now the memory can be retrieved without the hippocampus

what inspired and supported the standard consolidation theory (SCT)?

- patient HM who had hippocampal lesions was shown to have amnesia that was temporally graded - he could rmb events from a long time ago, but not anything that happened in the recent past - researchers then reasoned new memories needed the hippocampus, but older memories depended on other brain regions and didn't need the hippocampus anymore

what is semanticization?

- process of pulling general knowledge out from rehearsed events - stored separately from episodic memory - requires the hippocampus to create, but doesn't need it to retrieve - without proper hippocampus, making semantic memories as an adult is super slow and takes a lot of effort -> matches what we saw with Clive Wearing

what are regions of the autobiographical memory network?

- recall autobiographical memory = episodic and semantic memory - hippocampus - medial parietal regions: precuneus, retrosplenial cortex, posterior cingulate -> midline lump imp for autobiographical and episodic memory (also imp nodes in default network) - medial PFC - medial temporal regions hooked up to the hippocampus: entorhinal cortex (tip of the ventral visual stream that directly comm to hippocampus), parahippocampal gyrus (part of ventral visual stream sensitive to scenes, not objects) - lateral temporal regions: imp for semantic memory - lateral parietal cortex

how does standard consolidation theory (SCT) explain the loss of memories?

- recent memory is vulnerable because consolidation process hasn't happened yet - so lesioning the hippocampus would wipe it out - leave enough time for consolidation --> redistribute the memory from the hippocampus to a diff brain network incl. the neocortex - these consolidated memories are more resistant to damage - lesioning the hippocampus now won't affect these old memories

according to the multiple trace theory, what is needed for semanticization?

- rehearsal! - important idea for the Bird paper - semantic memory comes from episodic memory - every semantic memory starts out as an episodic memory (normally several) - every time an old memory is retrieved, a new trace is created, which relies on the hippocampus - the repetition of this process leads to leaving multiple traces - making lots of related traces lets our brain take away the common themes -> take out the features these multiple traces share - integrate this info w our preexisting knowledge to make semantic memories that exist of the hippocampus - eg. first day to work, walk a specific path -> walk to work every day for weeks, sometimes take a diff part of the route -> then distill common features of all these walks -> produce more general knowledge that exists independently from memory of those specific walks - then able to report that u always walk to work across the athletic field then go along Main Mall

what is reinstatement?

- related to rehearsal, rehearsal involves reinstatement - describes process of brain consolidating a memory by playing the pattern of neuronal/voxel activation that represented the initial event during encoding offline at a later time point - our brain calls up the same patterns of activity from when the event first happened - proposed this is a mechanism behind semanticization - HSAM ppl rehearse their memories a lot - go over them in their heads, file them

what is highly superior autobiographical memory (HSAM)?

- watched documentary about this - for normal ppl, knowledge of public events becomes semantic knowledge - but for HSAM ppl, they tie everything that happens to an autobiographical memory, can see everything vividly thru their own eyes - perhaps that their memories don't get fully semanticized - not better learners, show avg scores on lab memory tasks not specifically for autobiographical memory (combo of both episodic and semantic) - HSAM ppl recall past in super rich details in an automatic way - don't need mneomic techniques or practise to memorize - subject to false memories as other ppl


Kaugnay na mga set ng pag-aaral

Computer Organization and Architecture cs 220 William Stalling 9th ed

View Set

Compensation Midterm (Ch. 5-8, 12, 13, 17)

View Set

Chapter 45: Cerebral Dysfunction (Perry) NCLEX Style Qs

View Set

ACG 2021 Ch. 4 Focus Practice Set

View Set

15: Federal Employment Laws That Impact Compensation and Benefits

View Set

RN Nutrition Online Practice 2023 A

View Set

HISTORY - THE NATION SUFFERS GROWING PAINS

View Set

Motor Behavior Chapter 5: Movement Models

View Set

Chapter 11: Curriculum Standards, Assessment, and Student Learning

View Set