PSYC 3610 Lecture Notes - Lecture 10: Temporal Lobe, Anterograde Amnesia, Temporal Lobe Epilepsy

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CHAPTER 10 MEMORY DISORDERS
Living with Alzheimer’s and Dementia (video)
Decline in speed of processing and retaining information comes with normal
aging
Dementia loss of cognitive function to the point where it affects daily life
activities
o Alzheimer’s
o Vascular
o Lewy body
o Frontotemporal
Damage to brain cells interfere with normal communication
o Hippocampus memory loss
o Frontal lobe loss of emotional control
o Temporal lobe retrieving the right words
Aging is the primary risk factor.
Race and ethnicity
o Hispanic and African Americans more likely than Caucasian to be
affected by dementia
What is Amnesia?
Amnesia: any impairment of memory abilities beyond normal forgetting
In most cases, amnesia refers to an acquired condition brought about by
trauma to the brain.
A whole host of different disorders can be classified as amnesia.
o The most common form of amnesia is associated with Alzheimer’s
disease.
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The major deficit in most cases is in encoding new information into episodic
memory.
o But some amnesias affect retrieval from episodic memory, access to
semantic memory, access to working memory, and executive control
of memory.
Neurological amnesias amnesias that result from physical destruction of
different regions of the brain
Psychogenic amnesias quite uncommon; do not result directly from brain
damage but seem to be elicited by psychological trauma
Case Studies of Amnesia
Patient HM
In 1953, neurosurgeon William Scoville removed HM’s hippocampi as a
treatment for epilepsy.
o Decreased seizures
o IQ increased
o Working memory was normal
o Ability to speak, understand, read, and write were not impaired
o Able to remember much of his life from before the surgery no
retrograde amnesia
The effect on HM’s ability to encode new information was devastating.
o HM never learned anything new in a direct and conscious manner.
o Anterograde amnesia
Implicit memory was largely intact.
o Procedural memory
Anterograde amnesia was originally attributed to deficits in the hippocampus
and surrounding temporal lobe areas.
However, more recent MRI on HM also showed damage to other areas of the
brain, including the amygdala.
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Clive Wearing
Wearing contracted viral encephalitis, which causes massive swelling of the
brain.
It caused massive damage to his brain, including to his medial temporal lobes
and prefrontal lobes.
Wearing has severe anterograde amnesia, and he also has severe retrograde
amnesia global amnesia.
o As such, he lives in a perpetual present.
o Can maintain information for about 10 seconds
His amnesia does not extend to lexical memory, nor to procedural memory.
Anterograde Amnesia
Anterograde amnesia: an inability to form new memories following brain
damage
Mild impairment a person simple requires more time to encode information
than normal individuals do
o May be able to compensate for their deficit (compensatory devices)
o In some cases, can even resume careers
Severe impairment a person may remember little of anything new
o In need of round-the-clock supervision
o May forget where they live if they have moved since their injury
In all cases, there is difficulty in learning new information, whether that
information is episodic or semantic in nature.
Damage in the brain tends to be in the hippocampus (learning and memory)
and medial temporal lobes (cortical area in the temporal lobe associated with
learning and memory).
A second locus in the brain also causes the amnesic syndrome the
mamillary bodies of the diencephalon (subcortical region associated with
learning).
Damage to the adjacent fornix can also induce anterograde amnesia.
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