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It’s a Boy!. Long-term Memory. Where does the dissociation between structures involved in LTM come from (in humans)?. Long-term Memory. Patient H.M. “Loss of Recent Memory After Bilateral Hippocampal Lesions”, Scoville and Milner (1957)
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Long-term Memory Where does the dissociation between structures involved in LTM come from (in humans)?
Patient H.M. • “Loss of Recent Memory After Bilateral Hippocampal Lesions”, Scoville and Milner (1957) • onset of epilepsy at age ten, perhaps due to bike accident (wear a helmet!) • 1953 - underwent temporal lobectomy to reduce seizure activity
Patient H.M. • severe anterograde amnesia • temporally graded retrograde amnesia
Patient H.M. Memory and perceptual skills are dissociable. Lesions of the MTL produce amnesia for recent but not remote events. There are multiple long-term memory systems in the brain.
Long-term Memory • What’s the one thing that all of these people have in common? Lesions!
Long-term Memory • What about normal memory? • That is, memory in the “normal” brain
Long-term Memory The theory is that the MTL is temporally involved in declarative memory in normal humans…
Long-term Memory • functional imaging data from “normal” subjects confirms lesion studies • be skeptical!
Long-term Memory • What would it be like to possess the ability to remember everything?
Long-term Memory • Case study of S. (Solomon Shereshevskii) • Russian journalist • never took any notes, recalled everything verbatim • thought this was “normal”
Long-term Memory • Alexander Luria - Soviet neuropsychologist
Long-term Memory • Shereshevskii suffered from synaesthesia • stimulation of one sense leads to automatic stimulation of another • hearing a sound produces a visual experience • “I can see the music…”
Long-term Memory • random number table
Long-term Memory 1 this is a proud, well-built man 2 is a high-spirited woman 3 is a gloomy person 6 is a man with a swollen foot 7 is a man with a moustache 8 is a very stout woman - a sack within a sack. “As for the number 87, what I see is a fat woman and a man twirling his moustache”
Long-term Memory • memory consists of associative networks • perhaps mnemonists can create better networks To Kill A Mockingbird
Long-term Memory • memory consists of associative networks • perhaps mnemonists can create better networks highschool Mr. Lacey To Kill A Mockingbird English
Long-term Memory • memory consists of associative networks • perhaps mnemonists can create better networks skiing highschool mockingbird Mr. Lacey To Kill A Mockingbird canary bird English racism chicken Martin Luther King
Long-term Memory • What do you think the brain of someone that has this “super memory” would look like?
Long-term Memory • What if I told you it looked like this? Kim Peek
Long-term Memory • macroencephaly • no corpus callosum • no anterior/posterior commisure • degenerated cerebellum
Long-term Memory • Autism? • Motor disturbances • Overall I.Q. of 87 • despite this, he displays some amazing abilities…
Long-term Memory http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k2T45r5G3kA
Long-term Memory • 98% retention rate for reading material • reads on average 8 books a day (has approximately 9000 memorized!) • one page every 8-10 seconds • also has incredible memory for music, often remembering compositions only experienced once
Long-term Memory What could support this ability? “Does brain damage stimulate compensatory development in some other area of the brain, or does it simply allow otherwise latent abilities to emerge?”