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Amnesia What is it?. Memory . Proposed Types of Memory. Amnesia. Loss of memory ability - usually due to lesion or surgical removal of various parts of the brain. Amnesia. Loss of memory ability - usually due to lesion or surgical removal of various parts of the brain Two broad categories:
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Amnesia • Loss of memory ability - usually due to lesion or surgical removal of various parts of the brain
Amnesia • Loss of memory ability - usually due to lesion or surgical removal of various parts of the brain • Two broad categories: • Retrograde: loss of memories for events prior to damage
Amnesia • Loss of memory ability - usually due to lesion or surgical removal of various parts of the brain • Two broad categories: • Retrograde: loss of memories for events prior to damage • Anterograde: loss of ability to store new memories of events after damage
Amnesia • Short-term and sensory memory are typically functional
Amnesia • Amnesia patients exhibit recency effect but not primacy effect
Causes of Amnesia • Concussion • Migraines • Hypoglycemia • Epilepsy • Electroconvulsive shock therapy • Specific brain lesions (i.e. surgical removal) • Ischemic events • Drugs (esp. anesthetics) • Infection • Psychological • Nutritional deficiency
Amnesia - associated brain regions • Diencephalic amnesia - damage to the medial thalamus and mammillary nuclei
Amnesia - associated brain regions • Diencephalic amnesia - damage to the medial thalamus and mammillary nuclei • Medial temporal lobe amnesia - damage to the hippocampal formation, uncus, amygdala, and surrounding cortical areas
Amnesia - associated brain regions • Diencephalic amnesia - damage to the medial thalamus and mammillary nuclei • Medial temporal lobe amnesia - damage to the hippocampal formation, uncus, amygdala, and surrounding cortical areas • Other implicated regions include Anterior Lateral Temporal Lobe and Frontal Lobes
Amnesia Thalamus Hippocampus
Diencephalic Amnesia • Damage to the medial thalamus and/or mammillary bodies • stroke • Korsakoff’s syndrome • Caused by thiamine deficiency as a result of chronic alcoholism
Korsakoff’s Syndrome The Lost Mariner - What happened to Jimmie? What was his life like?
Korsakoff’s Syndrome (The Lost Mariner) • Lesions to Medial Thalamus • Results from chronic alcoholism and consequent thiamine deficiency
Korsakoff’s Syndrome (The Lost Mariner) • Lesions to Medial Thalamus • Results from chronic alcoholism and consequent thiamine deficiency • Severe anterograde amnesia
Korsakoff’s Syndrome (The Lost Mariner) • Lesions to Medial Thalamus • Results from chronic alcoholism and consequent thiamine deficiency • Severe anterograde amnesia • Severe retrograde amnesia extending years before damage
Korsakoff’s Syndrome (The Lost Mariner) • Lesions to Medial Thalamus • Results from chronic alcoholism and consequent thiamine deficiency • Severe anterograde amnesia • Severe retrograde amnesia extending years before damage • Confabulation - make up stories to explain absence of memory
Korsakoff’s Syndrome (The Lost Mariner) • Lesions to Medial Thalamus • Results from chronic alcoholism and consequent thiamine deficiency • Severe anterograde amnesia • Severe retrograde amnesia extending years before damage • Confabulation - make up stories to explain absence of memory • Often unaware of their deficit
Medial Temporal lobe amnesia • Hippocampus is most important site of damage
H. M. • Patient H. M. - suffered from extreme epilepsy
H. M. • Patient H. M. - bilateral resection of medial temporal lobes (containing hippocampus) • William Beecher Scoville and Brenda Milner - late 1950’s
H. M. • Patient H. M. - bilateral resection of medial temporal lobes (containing hippocampus) • William Beecher Scoville and Brenda Milner - late 1950’s • Severe anterograde amnesia
H. M. • Patient H. M. - bilateral resection of medial temporal lobes (containing hippocampus) • William Beecher Scoville and Brenda Milner - late 1950’s • Severe anterograde amnesia • Retrograde amnesia for 1 - 3 years before surgery
H. M. • Patient H. M. - bilateral resection of medial temporal lobes (containing hippocampus) • William Beecher Scoville and Brenda Milner - late 1950’s • Severe anterograde amnesia • Retrograde amnesia for 1 - 3 years before surgery • Disconnection of autonomic responses such as hunger/satiety and Galvanic Skin Response (GSR)
H. M. • Some aspects of memory were spared (at least to some extent)
H. M. • Some aspects of memory were spared (at least to some extent) • Procedural memory was largely unaffected - amnesia was largely restricted to episodic memory
H. M. • Some aspects of memory were spared (at least to some extent) • Procedural memory was largely unaffected - amnesia was largely restricted to episodic memory • Some implicit awareness of recent events
H. M. • Some aspects of memory were spared (at least to some extent) • Procedural memory was largely unaffected - amnesia was largely restricted to episodic memory • Some implicit awareness of recent events • Normal digit span (short-term memory) !
E. P. • Suffered acute viral disease in brain • Damage sustained in temporal lobes, notably the hippocampus
E. P. • Suffered acute viral disease in brain • Damage sustained in temporal lobes, notably the hippocampus • Displays anterograde amnesia • Short term memory intact • Lives in a permanent present
E. P. • Suffered acute viral disease in brain • Damage sustained in temporal lobes, notably the hippocampus • Displays anterograde amnesia • Short term memory intact • Lives in a permanent present • What else can we infer from the interview seen?
Hypermnesia - S. • “Photographic” extreme memory ability (a mnemonist)
Hypermnesia - S. • “Photographic” extreme memory ability (a mnemonist) • Able to recall complex test stimuli
Hypermnesia - S. • S. used two “strategies” or abilities typical of mnemonists: • Rich synesthesia-like quality to his perception of stimuli - leads to stronger associative links
Hypermnesia - S. • S. used two “strategies” or abilities typical of mnemonists: • Rich synesthesia-like quality to his perception of stimuli - leads to stronger associative links • Vivid and elaborate mental imagery of things he should remember
Hypermnesia - S. • “ Even numbers remind me of images. Take the number 1. This is a proud, well-built man; 2 is a high-spirited woman; 3 a gloomy person (shy, I don’t Know); 6 a man with a swollen foot...” Luria, A.R. The mind of a mnemonist. 1968 Luria, A.R. The man with a shattered world. 1972
Amnesia What pattern of result can be seen across these patient’s cases? What does it suggest about memory systems?
Dissociation of Memory Systems • Memory systems are “doubly-dissociated”
Dissociation of Memory Systems • Memory systems are “doubly-dissociated” • Patient H.M.’s lesion affected only episodic long-term memory - semantic and procedural memory were intact - short-term memory was intact