Top Banner
Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp [email protected] HowYourBrainWorks.net
40

Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp [email protected] HowYourBrainWorks.net.

Jan 02, 2016

Download

Documents

Jasper Little
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

Remembering Things

How Your Brain Works - Week 9

Dr. Jan [email protected]

HowYourBrainWorks.net

Page 2: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

Types of Memory

Short Term or“Working”

Memory

Long Term

Procedural Declarative

EpisodicSemantic

Visuo-Spatial Phonological

Page 3: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

Working Memory

Page 4: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

Figure 2 Task design and behavior.

D J Freedman et al. Science 2001;291:312-316

Published by AAAS

Page 5: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

Figure 3: single neuron example.

D J Freedman et al. Science 2001;291:312-316

Published by AAAS

Page 6: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

Comparing ITC and PFC

Page 7: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

Forming long term memories with synaptic plasticity

Page 8: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

Long-term Memory

• For “procedural” type learning and memory, see last lecture.

• For “declarative” memory welcome to the world of “patient H.M.”

Page 9: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

Patient HM

• Henry Molaison his hippocampus removed bilaterally in 1953 to treat severe epilepsy.

• He died in 2008.

Page 10: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

Patient HM

• The surgery successfully cured his epilepsy, but left him with severe anterograde amnesia.

• He could no longer form new episodic memories, but his ability for procedural learning remained in tact.

Page 11: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

The hippocampus

Page 12: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

Structure of the hippocampus

Page 13: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

• EPSPs recorded in hippocampal CA1 cell. • 100 Hz stimulus bursts applied to “Schaeffer collateral” inputs, either

under voltage clamp or with simultaneous depolarisation.• If the input bursts are paired with depolarisation, the EPSPs are

“potentiated” (i.e. larger).

Time (min)

An Example of Hippocampal LTP

Page 14: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

The NMDA Receptor• NMDA receptors appear to

be critically involved in LTP at the glutamatergic synapse.

• NMDA receptor channels open only of glutamate binds AND depolarisation removes a Mg++ from the channel’s pore.

• Drugs that block the NMDA receptor (AP-5, MK-801, ketamine) prevent LTP.

Page 15: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

NMDA receptor activation lets Ca++ in

• Dendrite filled with Ca++ indicator “calcium green” emits a flash of fluoresecent light at synaptic spine when synapse is activated.

• The fluorescence is inhibited by NMDA receptor blocker AP5

Fig 7 of Lisman et al Nat Rev Neurosci 2002 Vol 3 p 175

Page 16: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

LTP increases AMPA currents

• Ca++ activates Calcium/Calmodulin Kinase II (CaMKII)• CaMKII increases AMPA currents in 3 ways:• It phosphoryaltes AMPA channels• It anchors AMPA channels at the postsynaptic membrane• It favours the insertion of further AMPA receptors in the

membrane

Fig 7 of Lisman et al Nat RevNeurosci 2002 Vol 3 p 175

Page 17: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

Hebb’s Postulate

“Cells that fire together, wire together”

Page 18: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.
Page 19: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.
Page 20: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.
Page 21: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.
Page 22: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.
Page 23: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.
Page 24: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

Break

Page 25: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

Auto-associative nets

Page 26: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.
Page 27: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

What does this remind you of

• A Rorschach Blot

Page 28: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.
Page 29: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

Inputs and

outputs from

hippo-campus

Page 30: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.
Page 31: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.
Page 32: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

Tetrode recordings

Page 33: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

Place cells

• Place cells were discovered by John O;Keefe and Bruce McNaughton in the early 70s.

• The video shows recordings of rat hippocampal place cells made in Matt Wilson’s lab at MIT.

Page 34: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

NMDA receptor antagonists can impair the ability to learn

• Rat ventricles injected with either saline (control) or NMDA antagonist AP5.

• Rats trained in Morris water maze task.

• Control rats learn to remember where the submerged platform is, AP5 rats don’t.

Morris et al Nature 319, 774 - 776 (1986)

Page 35: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

Sleep and memory consolidation

• From Stickgold (2005) Nature

Page 36: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

Sleep phases and memory

• Procedural memory (such as finger sequence tasks) benefits from slow wave and REM sleep.

• Declarative maze running or water maze performance benefits particularly from REM sleep.

• The role of sleep in learning declarative items such as vocabulary is less clear.

Page 37: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

Forgetting

• Memory is due to widely distributed patterns of changed synaptic connectivity.

• Memories can be lost either through degradation or through interference.

• Some degradation is normal, but certain pathological conditions can hasten memory loss and cause retrograde amnesia or dementia.

Page 38: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

Korsakoff’s Syndrome

• Between 10% and 24% of cases of dementia in the UK are estimated to be alcohol related (Kopelman et al  Alcohol and Alcoholism Jan 2009).

• Alcohol can damage the brain directly as well as by inducing thiamine (vitamin B1) deficiency.

• The mammillary bodies are often particularly affected.

Page 39: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

The MammilaryBodies

Page 40: Remembering Things How Your Brain Works - Week 9 Dr. Jan Schnupp jan.schnupp@dpag.ox.ac.uk HowYourBrainWorks.net.

Alzheimer’s Disease

• Thought to affect 10% of over 60s and 20% of over 80%• Cause unclear, treatment accordingly extremely difficult.• “Graceful” degeneration?