Memory Disorders

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Memory Disorders. Psychology 3717. Introduction. The strange case of Charles D’Sousa Or is it Philip Cutajar? Rare type of disorder Some stuff clearly spared. Introduction. Results with amnesiacs has lead to many discoveries about memory Episodic vs. semantic memory - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Memory Disorders

Memory Disorders

Psychology 3717

Introduction

• The strange case of Charles D’Sousa

• Or is it Philip Cutajar?

• Rare type of disorder

• Some stuff clearly spared

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are needed to see this picture.

Introduction

• Results with amnesiacs has lead to many discoveries about memory– Episodic vs. semantic memory– Procedural vs. declarative memory– Implicit vs. explicit memory– Phonological loop vs. visuo spatial

sketchpad

problems

• Taxonomy

• Individual differences

• Interpretation

• Application

• Mostly comes down to a lack of control, which of course is inevitable

Case studies

• We pretty much have to rely on these

• They are, thankfully, rare

• Usually some sort of accident or a stroke

Case SP

• Stroke patient

• Both Medial temporal lobes, left Hp and lots of surrounding area, but not the amygdala

• Had trouble naming objects

• Anterograde and retrograde amnesia

• Similar to KC

Clive Wearing

• Case of encephalitis• Pervasive amnesia• Both semantic and

episodic impairment• Temporal lobe

dilation• Hp destroyed

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Performance Patterns

• Retrograde amnesia– Losing past memories

• Anterograde amnesia– No new memories

• Spared function– Often implicit tasks, such as priming or

ability to learn a new skill

Typically spared

• Working Memory

• Semantic memory – Even KC could learn new stuff

• Declarative information using Tulving’s method– Restrict errors

Why?

• Difficulties in interference, retrieval and encoding

• Consolidation– Tends to come down to something to do

with HP– Context or sending item off for processing

or some such thing

Semantic memory problems

• What is a cat?

• Temporal lobe problems

• Oddly enough, episodic memory often intact in these rare cases

Working Memory Problems

• There are cases of people with intact phonological loops and visuo spatial sketchpads that are pretty much toast

• And vice versa

Alzheimer’s

• More than half of all dementia is from AD

• 2 times more women than men– Could be because

women live longer though

• dementia and brain stuff– Neurofibrillary tangles

and neuritic plaques

AD

• MASSIVE cell death

• In essence, you get like lesions everywhere

• ‘cortical’ dementia, but you get these lesions, holes really, everywhere

Neurotransmitters affected

• ACh is important in memory, especially in HP

• The ACh system is severely damaged in AD

• Indeed it is almost targeted

• Other systems too though

Memory effects

• Episodic effects

• Eventually semantic effects

• Retrieval cues don’t help– Information was not even encoded

• Nondeclarative stuff, skills etc, are the last to go

Treatment

• Most drugs target the cholinergic system• This disease not only affects the victim,

but also his/her family• NGF is promising• Treatments will come, but, reversal, I

dunno• Respite care is key for the family

Conclusions

• Frankly there is not a great deal of hope for most amnesiacs

• That said, neuroscience is moving pretty fast

• Has helped us understand normal function