memory

35
DR. ZAHOOR ALI SHAIKH 1

Upload: parson

Post on 21-Jan-2016

75 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

MEMORY. DR. ZAHOOR ALI SHAIKH. HIGHER FUNCTIONS OF BRAIN: LEARNING MEMORY JUDGEMENT LANGUAGE SPEECH. WE WILL DISCUSS MEMORY UNDER THE FOLLOWING HEADINGS: WHAT IS MEMORY? WHERE IS MEMORY STORED? CLASSIFICATION OF MEMORY HOW STORAGE OF MEMORY OCCURS? MOLECULAR MECHANISM. Cont…. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: MEMORY

DR. ZAHOOR ALI SHAIKH

1

Page 2: MEMORY

HIGHER FUNCTIONS OF BRAIN:LEARNINGMEMORYJUDGEMENTLANGUAGESPEECH

2

Page 3: MEMORY

WE WILL DISCUSS MEMORY UNDER THE FOLLOWING HEADINGS:WHAT IS MEMORY?WHERE IS MEMORY STORED?CLASSIFICATION OF MEMORYHOW STORAGE OF MEMORY OCCURS?MOLECULAR MECHANISM

3

Page 4: MEMORY

Cont….TERMINOLOGY USED (REMEMBER THE

WORDS)

RECALL MECHANISMCAUSES OF LOSS OF MEMORYHOW TO TEST THE MEMORY

4

Page 5: MEMORY

WHAT IS MEMORY? (LONG TERM)MEMORY IS STORAGE OF ACQUIRED

KNOWLEDGE FOR LATTER RECALLWE KNOW LITTLE ABOUT THE

MECHANISM OF MEMORY

5

Page 6: MEMORY

MEMORY INVOLVESRECEPTION OF INFORMATIONFORMATION OF MEMORY TRACE CONSOLIDATION OF MEMORY TRACERECALL OF MEMORY TRACE

SEQUENCE OF EVENTS IN MEMORYNEWLY ACQUIERED INFORMATION – SHORT

TERM MEMORY (USUALLY LOST) OR IT IS TRANSFERRED TO LONG TERM MEMORY BY REHERSAL – CONSOLIDATION INTO LONG TERM MEMORY

6

Page 7: MEMORY

WHERE IS MEMORY STORED?MEMORIES ARE STORED IN THE BRAIN AT

SYNAPSES BY CHANGING THE BASIC SENSITIVITY OF SYNAPTIC TRANSMISSION BETWEEN NEURONS. WE CREATE A MEMORY TRACE

MEMORY TRACE: THE NEURAL CHANGE AT SYNAPSES WHICH IS

RESPONSIBLE FOR RETENTION OR STORAGE OF KNOWLEDGE IS KNOWN AS MEMORY TRACE.

ONCE MEMORY TRACE ARE ESTABLISHED, THEY CAN BE ACTIVATED BY THINKING MIND TO REPRODUCE MEMORY

7

Page 8: MEMORY

WHAT PARTS OF BRAIN ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR MEMORY?MEMORY TRACES OCCUR AT MANY REGIONS OF

BRAIN AT CORTICAL AND SUBCORTICAL REGIONS. THERE IS NO SINGLE MEMORY CENTER

THE IMPORTANT MEMORY AREA ARE: CEREBRAL CORTEX (MOTOR,SENSORY,VISUAL

AUDITORY) PREFRONTAL CORTEX HIPPOCAMPUS & MEDIAL TEMPORAL LOBE LIMBIC SYSTEM THALAMUS CEREBELLUM

8

Page 9: MEMORY

IMPORTANTHIPPOCAMPUS – MAINTAINS RECORD OF

EVERYDAY EVENTS IN OUR LIFE.PERSON WITH HIPPOCAMPUS DAMAGE ARE

EXTREMELY FORGETFULL TO DAILY FUNCTIONING

HIPPOCAMPUS IS FOR SHORT TERM MEMORY

NOTE: IN ALZHEIMERS DISSEASE DAMAGE OCCURS TO HIPPOCAMPUS REGION THEREFORE LOSS OF SHORT TERM MEMORY

9

Page 10: MEMORY

MEMORY MAY BEPOSITIVENEGATIVE

o POSITIVEMEMORY:o IS ALSO CALLED SENSATISATION OR

FACILITATIONo IT IS DUE TO STORAGE OF MEMORY TRACES

& RECOLLECTION OF PREVIOUS THOUGHTS OR EXPERIENCES

o IT OCCURS DUE TO FACILITATION OF SYNAPTIC PATHWAYS

10

Page 11: MEMORY

11

Page 12: MEMORY

(FROM GUYTONS TEXTBOOK OF PHYSIOLOGY)

CLASSIFICATION OF MEMORY:

1.SHORT TERM MEMORY• MEMORY WHICH LASTS FOR SECONDS TO MINUTES(UNLESS THEY ARE CONVERTED INTO LONG TERM

MEMORIES)Eg: TO REMEMBER TELEPHONE NUMBER 7 – 10 DIGITS

FOR SECONDS OR MINUTES, TILL YOU ARE THINKING ABOUT THE NUMBERS

2.INTERMEDIATE LONG TERM MEMORY:LASTS FOR MINUTES, HOURS, DAYS TO WEEKS,

BUT THEN THEY WILL BE LOST ( UNLESS CONVERTED TO LONG TERM MEMORY)

3.LONG TERM MEMORY:WHICH ONCE STORED CAN BE RECALLED UP TO

YEARS OR EVEN FOR WHOLE LIFEEg: NUMBER OF PRAYERS PER DAY

DAYS OF THE WEEK

12

Page 13: MEMORY

(FROM GANONGS REVIEW OF PHYSIOLOGY )

CLASSIFICATION OF MEMORY:

1.SHORT TERM MEMORY: WHICH LASTS FOR SECONDS TO HOURS –

HIPPOCAMPUS Eg: MEMORY OF FEW WORDS, NUMBERS,

LETTERS LIMITED TO 7 – 10 NUMBERS LIKE TELEPHONE NUMBERS, CAR NUMBER

2.LONG TERM MEMORY: WHICH LAST FOR DAYS, MONTHS, YEARS OR

LIFETIME

We will follow this classification as Ganong is your text book

13

Page 14: MEMORY

ANOTHER TYPE OF MEMORYWORKING MEMORY:

IT INCLUDES MAINLY SHORT TERM MEMORY, THAT IS USED DURING THE INTELLECTUAL REASONING , BUT IS TERMINATED AS PROBLEM IS SOLVED. – PREFRONTAL LOBE IS INVOLVED

Eg: SEE THE TELEPHONE NUMBER , REMEMBER THE NUMBER WHILE PICKUP PHONE, DIAL THE NUMBER AND TALK ABOUT THE PROBLEM Eg: Examination Preparation

NOW IT IS THOUGHT THAT INTELLIGENCE DEPENDS ON WORKING MEMORY.

14

Page 15: MEMORY

MEMORY CLASSIFICATION ACCORDING TO THE TYPE OF INFORMATION:DECLARATIVE MEMORY OR EXPLICIT MEMORY

IT IS MEMORY OF SURROUNDINGS, EVENTS, TIME, Eg. WE PLAYED FOOTBALL GAME TODAY

DECLARATIVE MEMORY IS DEPENDENT ON HIPPOCAMPUS

SKILL MEMORY OR IMPLICIT MEMORY IT IS LEARNING OF SKILLS Eg. LEARNING

FOOTBALL, HOW TO HIT OR STRIKE MOVE THE BALL etc.

SKILLS ONCE ACQIRED BECOME AUTOMATIC RETENTION OF SKILLS DOES NOT INVOLVE

HIPPOCAMPUS BUT CEREBELLUM, PRIMARY MOTOR CORTEX, SOMATOSENSORY CORTEX, VISUAL PROCESSING AREAS

15

Page 16: MEMORY

HOW MEMORY IS STORED:MEMORY DOES NOT RESIDE IN A SINGLE

NEURON BUT CHANGES OCCUR IN THE PATTERN OF SIGNALS TRANSMITTED ACROSS SYNAPSES WITHIN A NORMAL NETWORK

SHORT TERM MEMORY:INVOVES TRANSIENT MODIFICATION IN

THE FUNCTION OF SYNAPSES Eg: AMOUNT OF NEUROTRANSMITTER RELEASED IN RESPONSE TO STIMULATION

EXPERIMENTS ARE DONE IN SEA SNAIL (APLYSIA)Eg. HABITUATION & SENSITIZATION

16

Page 17: MEMORY

APLYSIA

17

Page 18: MEMORY

MEMORY SYSTEM THAT HAS BEEN DISCOVERED IN THE SNAIL APLYSIA

18

Page 19: MEMORY

APLYSIA

19

Page 20: MEMORY

LONG TERM MEMORY: INVOVES PERMENANT STRUCRURAL CHANGES

BETWEEN EXISTING NEURONS IN THE BRAIN DUE TO ACTIVATION OF SPECIFIC GENES THAT CONTROL PROTEIN SYNTHESIS. THESE PROTEINS CAUSE : FORMATION OF NEW SYNAPTIC CONNECTIONS GREATER BRANCHING ANDF ELONGATION OF

DENDRITES IN NERVE CELL IN BRAIN AREAS INVOLVED FOR MEMORY STORAGE.

INCREASE NO. OF VESICLES IN PRESYNAPTIC NEURON INCREASE NO. OF SIGNAL TRANSMISSION

NAME OF POSITIVE REGULATORY PROTEIN FOR LONG TERM MEMORY IS “CREB” , A MOLECULAR SWITCH THAT ACTIVATES LONG TERM MEMORY STORAGE.

20

Page 21: MEMORY

CONSOLIDATION OF MEMORY: (TO REMEMBER)FOR SHORT TERM MEMORY TO BE CONVERTED

INTO LONG TERM MEMORY IT MUST BE CONSOLIDATED

CONSOLIDATION OCCURS BY REPEATEDLY ACTIVATING THE SHORT TERM MEMORY, WHICH WILL INITIATE CHEMICAL, PHYSICAL AND ANATOMICAL CHANGE IN THE SYNAPSES THAT ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR LONG TERM MEMORY

IT TAKES 5 TO 10 MINUTES FOR MINIMAL CONSOLIDATION AND ONE HOUR OR MORE FOR STRONG CONSOLIDATION

SOME FACTORS PREVENT CONSOLIDATIONHEAD INJURY – BRAIN CONCUSSIONDEEP GENERAL ANAESTHESIA – SUDDENLY

APPLIEDELECTRICALLY INDUCED BRAIN CONVULSIONS

21

Page 22: MEMORY

22

Page 23: MEMORY

LOSS OF MEMORY (AMNESIA):RETROGRADE AMNESIA

LOSS OF MEMORY BEFORE THE ACCIDENTANTEROGRADE AMNESIA

LOSS OF MEMORY AFTER THE ACCIDENT

23

Page 24: MEMORY

AMNESIA

PASTPRESENTACCIDEN

TRETROGRADE

MEMORYBEFORE THE

ACCIDENT

ANTEROGRADE MEMORY

AFTER THE ACCIDENT

• HIPPOCAMPUS REMOVAL (FOR TEMPORAL LOBE EPILEPSY) OR LESION – MAINLY ANTEROGRADE AMNESIA

• THALAMIC LESION MAINLY RETROGRADE AMNESIA• THEREFORE IT SHOWS HIPPOCAMPUS IS RESPONSIBLE

FOR NEW MEMORIES AND THALAMUS STORES OLD MEMORIES

24

Page 25: MEMORY

TERMINOLOGY USED IN MEMORY:MEMORY TRACE: THE NEURAL CHANGE

RESPONSIBLE FOR RETENTION OF KNOWLEDGE IS KNOWN AS MEMORY TRACE

SENSITIZATION OR POSITIVE MEMORY OR FACILITATION

NEGATIVE MEMORY OR HABITUATION OR INHIBITION

SHORT TERM MEMORYLONG TERM MEMORYWORKING MEMORYMEMORY ACCORDING TO TYPE OF INFORMATION

DECLARATIVE MEMORY SKILL MEMORY

AMNESIA OR LOSS OF MEMORY RETROGRADE AMNESIA ANTEROGRADE AMNESIA

25

Page 26: MEMORY

RECALL OF MEMORY:ALL COMPONENTS OF MEMORY ARE

BROUGHT TO CONSCIOUSNESS RECALL OF MEMORY BY . . . .

SIMILAR SCENE SIMILAR SOUNDSIMILAR SMELLSIMILAR VIEWSIMILAR WORDS

26

Page 27: MEMORY

DEMENTIAIMPAIMENT OF

MEMORY, INTELLIGENCE AND PERSONALITY WITHOUT IMPAIRMENT OF CONSCIOUSNESS

27

Page 28: MEMORY

HOW TO TEST THE MEMORY?RECENT MEMORY TEST:

GIVE NAME AND ADDRESS TO REMEMBER (7 – 10 WORDS) THEN ASK 5 MINUTES LATER OR

GIVE THREE ITEMS WITHIN THE ROOM AND ASK THE PATIENTS TO REPEAT THEIR NAMES AFTER 5 MINUTES

DISTANT MEMORY TEST: ASK IMPORTANT DATE WHICH PATIENT

KNEW THE ANSWER AND CLINICIAN ALSO KNOWS THE ANSWER Eg. NATIONAL DAY,

28

Page 29: MEMORY

INTRESTING INFORMATION3 SPECIES HAVE BRAIN LARGER THAN

HUMANSI. ELEPHANTII. PORPOISEIII. WHALE

BUT IN RELATION TO BODY WEIGHT HUMAN BRAIN IS LARGE

WEIGHT OF A HUMAN BRAIN IS ABOUT THREE POUNDS OR 1.5 KG ALCOHOL CAUSES LOSS OF RECENT

MEMORYPATHALOGICAL CHANGES ARE SEEN IN MAMILLARY

BODIES WHICH HAS EXTENSIVE CONNECTIONS TO THE HIPPOCAMPUS

29

Page 30: MEMORY

IMPORTANT AREAS FOR . . . SHORT TERM MEMORY – HIPPOCAMPUS,

MEDIAL TEMPORAL LOBELONG TERM MEMORY – NEOCORTEXDECLARATIVE OR EXPRESSIVE OR EXPLICIT

MEMORY – HIPPOCAMPUSSKILL OR IMPLICIT OR NON DECLARATIVE

MEMORY – CEREBELLUM, BASAL GANGLIA.WORKING MEMORY – PREFRONTAL CORTEXMEMORIES VISUAL, OLFACTORY, AUDITORY

ARE LOCATED IN RESPECTIVE CORTICAL REGIONS.

30

Page 31: MEMORY

ALZHEIMER DISEASE LOSS OF RECENT MEMORY AFFECTED AREAS – HIPPOCAMPUS,

MAMMILLARY BODY, ANT. HYPOTHALAMUS, PREFRONTAL CORTEX, NEOCORTEX

THERE IS PROGRESSIVE LOSS OF SHORT TERM MEMORY AT THE AGE OF 50 YEARS OR AFTER

NEUROTANSMITTER ACETYLCHOLINE IS LOST DUE TO LOSS OF SYNAPSES AND NEURONS CAUSED BY TOXIC PEPTIDE A β1-40 AND A β1-42

SENILE DEMENTIANOTE SENILE DEMENTIA OCCURS AFTER THE

AGE OF 65 YEARS AND IT IS SLOWLY PROGRESSIVE

31

Page 32: MEMORY

MEMORY ESSAY QUESTION EXAM – RECALL

MEMORY (SUBJECTS PRODUCE INFORMATION ON THEIR OWN)

MCQ EXAM – RECOGNITION - SUBJECTS IDENTIFY PREVIOUSLY LEARNED INFORMATION

RESEARCH SHOWS RECOGNITION IS EASIER THAN RECALL

32

Page 33: MEMORY

MEMORYMETHOD OF STUDY IN HUMANS

PET SCAN (POSITRIN EMISSION TOMOGRAPHY) MEASURES LOCAL GLUCOSE METABOLISM

WHICH IS PROPORTIONATE TO THE NEURAL ACTIVITY

fMRI (FUNCTIONAL MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING) Measures local amount of oxygenated blood which

tells about the activity of brain

33

Page 34: MEMORY

HOW IMPORTANT IS MEMORY . . .IMAGINE IF WE WERE WITHOUT IT WE

WOULD NOT RECOGNISE ANYONE, WE WOULD REMEMBER NOTHING AND WOULD HAVE NO RECOLLECTION OF THE EVENTS OF OUR OWN LIVES. WE WOULD HAVE LACK OF KNOWLEDGE AS NEW BORN BABIES.

34

Page 35: MEMORY

THANK YOU

35