100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Summary

Memory (MLE) FULL SUMMARY

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
30
Uploaded on
04-10-2021
Written in
2020/2021

The entire Memory part of the MLE course summarised

Institution
Course










Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
Study
Course

Document information

Uploaded on
October 4, 2021
Number of pages
30
Written in
2020/2021
Type
Summary

Subjects

Content preview

Memory

1. Introduction and neurobiology of memory

What is memory?




Old book on memory improvement: Rhetorica ad Herennium
- Method of Loci; walking around a room and placing memories there
for improvement of recollection.

Randolf Menzel: Bees have memory stages optimized for supporting their
efforts in finding flowers for honey; some kind of intermediate
“temporary” memory that lasts only a few days.

Hermann Ebbinghaus
- Founder of modern memory psychology
- “Ebbinghaus’ forgetting curve”
Adolf Jost
- Jost’s Law: if 2 memory traces have equal retrieval probability, but
different ages, the older one will:
o Be forgotten more slowly than the younger one
o Benefit more from additional learning
Francis Bartlett
- Memory as a construction:
o Memories are complemented by known information; e.g., you
automatically complete an object when not being able to see
the whole thing, this is based on your knowledge of the object.
Lasley
- Neurobiologist who tried to find the memory storage in mice
- Cut different parts of cortex out after learning a maze; see which
mice can still do it
- Concluded that there is no specific place in the cortex, rather the
whole cortex combined is responsible for memory in mice

,Cognitive Psychology (> 1950’s)
- Influenced by emerging computer science
- RAM vs Hard Disk = STM vs LTM
- Memory is now viewed as carrier of information that is manipulated
during cognition
- Miller’s Law: we can retain 7 +/- 2 things in memory storage at the
same time

Atkinson and Shiffrin Model (1968)
- Sensory store,
- short-term/working store; maintenance rehearsal is necessary
- long-term store
Baddeley and Hitch added the “central executive”

Tulving (1985)
- Episodic memory (events in time, can “time travel” to them)
o “Experiences” that you “remember”
- Semantic memory (general knowledge)
o “knowledge” that you “know”
- Procedural memory (operations for executing tasks; e.g., know
how to tie your shoelaces)

Watson: fear experiment with baby; little Albert
- Used conditioning to make Albert afraid of objects that were first
neutral or even liked
- By means of presenting them combined with a loud bang

The Neurobiology of Memory

Donald Hebb: Long-Term Potentiation (LTP)
- Repeated stimulation -> “fire together wire together”
- Firing together increase physical size of the synapse
- More vesicles and more receptors arise between these neurons
Hebbian Learning
- when something new is learned, neurons actually physically make a
new connection
o can be shown in real life with two-photon microscopy in mice
- Dendritic spines grow AND shrink over time; this is fairly random;
neural connections fluctuate like crazy!
o Even happens in a time period of only 15 minutes

, Hippocampus
- Essential for the formation of Episodic Memory
- Spatial memory in rats (John O’Keefe): different cells in
hippocampus have shown to respond selectively to specific locations
in space; “place cells”
o Moser and Moser showed that place cells are specific to
Hexagons on a larger map; meaning that if you put the rat in
a larger space, the place cell will fire again when it is
represented in the next hexagon.
o These hexagonal patterns in space are formed by “grid
cells”
o Not found as much in monkey and human brain

Morris Water Maze
- For testing learning and forgetting in rats
- Rat has to find an invisible platform in the water so that they can
stand and not drown
- When no change in the maze; rats learn to find the platform very
quickly
- Normal vs hippocampal lesion rats:
o At variable starting positions: hippocampal lesion rats cannot
learn the maze, normal rats can; gradually faster with trials
o At constant starting positions: hippocampal lesion rats DO
learn it, but it takes more trials to be as fast as normal rats
- In people: hippocampal lesions still allow for learning new
procedural memory things; like a new skill
o This is an unconscious kind of learning; they do not know they
learned it

Hippocampus and memory
- Old idea: hippocampus is specialized in spatial memory
- Alternative idea: hippocampus plays a role in remembering complex
associations

Parahippocampal Areas (around the
hippocampus)
- Essential for formation of complex
associations; e.g., objects and their context
- The Delayed Non-Matching-to-Sample
Task
o Monkey is presented with a key and
another object
o Food can be found under the key
o After delay, the food will always be
found under the OTHER object; the
food is thus associated with the non-
$6.58
Get access to the full document:

100% satisfaction guarantee
Immediately available after payment
Both online and in PDF
No strings attached


Also available in package deal

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
casoosterveld Universitat Pompeu Fabra
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
52
Member since
4 year
Number of followers
40
Documents
17
Last sold
8 months ago

4.8

4 reviews

5
3
4
1
3
0
2
0
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions