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COGNITIVE SCIENCE 17 Can You Remember My Name?
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COGNITIVE SCIENCE 17 Can You Remember My Name? Part 2 Jaime A. Pineda, Ph.D.

Dec 20, 2015

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Page 1: COGNITIVE SCIENCE 17 Can You Remember My Name? Part 2 Jaime A. Pineda, Ph.D.

COGNITIVE SCIENCE 17

Can You Remember My Name?

Part 2 Jaime A. Pineda, Ph.D.

Page 2: COGNITIVE SCIENCE 17 Can You Remember My Name? Part 2 Jaime A. Pineda, Ph.D.

HIPPO CAMPUS

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Hippocampus: The Seahorse

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Surrounding areas of hippocampus

(Clark, 2006)Perirhinal, Entorhinal and Parahippocampal Cortices

Page 6: COGNITIVE SCIENCE 17 Can You Remember My Name? Part 2 Jaime A. Pineda, Ph.D.

Hippocampus Malfunctions

• Severe anterograde amnesia

• Mild retrograde amnesia

• Problems navigating space

• Seizures

• Early Alzheimer’s Disease

Page 7: COGNITIVE SCIENCE 17 Can You Remember My Name? Part 2 Jaime A. Pineda, Ph.D.

Hippocampus Functions

• Consolidation of STM to LTM

• Spatial and contextual memory

• Episodic memory

• Declarative memory

• Detection of novel stimuli

• Neurogenesis

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Spatial Navigation

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Time as London taxi driverV

olu

me

of h

ipp

ocam

pu

s Spatial Navigation (cont.)

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Age Differences in Maintenance Processes

600

800

1000

1200

1400

Rea

ctio

n T

ime

Memory Load

OlderYounger

Age differences increase with increasing memory set size

(Anders, Fozard & Lillyquist, 1972)

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L R L R

Rypma, Prabhakaran, Desmond, & Gabrieli, 2001Psychology and Aging

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Parahippocampus Hippocampus

Entorhinal cortex

Unimodal and polymodal association areas (frontal,

temporal, and parietal lobes)

Postrhinalcortex

Perirhinalcortex

DGCA3

SUBCA1

Trace Link

Page 17: COGNITIVE SCIENCE 17 Can You Remember My Name? Part 2 Jaime A. Pineda, Ph.D.

Hippocampal model

DG CA3 CA1

Entorhinal cortex

• Relating hippocampal structure to episodic memory function

• Mode shifting between storage and retrieval through novelty detection

• Population dynamics

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• Relates parahippocampal structure to episodic memory function

• Sensory integration• ‘Object’ & ‘Context’ input• Retrieval mechanisms

– free recall

– cued recall

– recognition

Parahippocampal model

Hippocampus

Entorhinal cortex

Unimodal and polymodal association areas (frontal,

temporal, and parietal lobes)

Postrhinalcortex

Perirhinalcortex

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Dentate gyrus

CA3

CA1subiculum

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Trisynaptic Circuit

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Circuit of Hippocampus Proper

Fimbria fornix (to mammillary bodies)

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Hippocampus Cells

Pyramidal Cells

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Place cells inhippocampusmap out the environment

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Place cells respond as a function of external cues

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Activity-Dependent Synaptic Plasticity

• Short-term plasticities– Facilitation (paired pulse facilitation):

100-200 ms; increased Ca++ increased p(NT release)

– Post-tetanic potentiation: 5-10 sec– Depression: hundreds of ms – few

minutes; caused by repetitive stimulation causing a decrease in p(NT release).

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Activity-Dependent Synaptic Plasticity (cont.)

• Long-term plasticities– Short-term potentiation/depression– Long-term potentiation/depression

LTP is a persistent increase in synaptic efficacy that can be rapidly induced

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Bliss and Lomo, 1973

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NMDA Receptor• “Detects” simultaneous events

(“AND” gate)

• Gated by combination of voltage and ligand

– Glu + Gly opens channel to Ca ++,

– Magnesium (Mg++) block removed by membrane depolarization

• Mediates learning and memory via LTP (long term potentiation)

– Involved in process of addiction; behavioral sensitization, and drug craving

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Learning Induced Changes in Dendrites

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Effects of Increased NMDA Receptors