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Published byMeagan O’Brien’ Modified over 8 years ago
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Cerebral Cortex 4
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Visual Association Cortex Higher-Order Visual Processing Dorsal pathways to parieto-occipital association cortex –Where? Ventral pathways to occipitotemporal association cortex –What?
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Primary Visual Cortex Injury Unilateral –Homonymous hemianopsia with macular sparing Bilateral –Cortical Blindness – Anton’s syndrome Anosognosia
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Inferior occipitotemporal association cortex What stream of visual analysis –Process color and visual form Prosopagnosia –Bilateral injury to inferior occipitotemporal cortex –Can describe, but cannot identify –Generic recognition - intact –Specific recognition - impaired
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Dorsolateral Parieto-occipital cortex Where stream of visual analysis
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Balint’s Syndrome Simultanagnosia Optic Ataxia Ocular apraxia
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Attention/Awareness Brain regions –Brainstem reticular formation –Thalamus –Basal forebrain –Cerebral cortex
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Memory Three types of memory –Emotional –Declarative –Procedural
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Emotional Memory Memory of feelings Memory for fear is in the amygdala Brain regions not known for other emotions
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Declarative memory AKA conscious, explicit, cognitive memory Memory for facts, events, concepts and locations Requires attention during recall
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Three stages Immediate (sensory register) –1 to 2 seconds –Memories can be easily displaced –Primary sensory and sensory association cortex Short-term memory –Brief storage –Begins to be lost in 1 minute if not rehearsed Long-term memory –Relatively permanent –Consolidation (ST LT)
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Neuroanatomy of Declarative Memory Sensory Association Areas Anterior Temporal Lobe Parahippocampal Cortex Hippocampus Basal forebrain, including basal nucleus of Meynert Cerebral Cortex
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Problems with Declarative Memory H.M. – bilateral removal of medial temporal lobe including the hippocampus –Consolidation lost Cannot form new long-term memories No memory for events since the surgery No memory for events less than one year before the surgery –Earlier memories intact –Can learn skills
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Procedural Memory AKA Skill, habit, nonconscious memory, implicit memory Requires practice Task can be done without conscious thought
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Three stages of Procedural Memory Cognitive –Beginning stages –Person thinks about what they are doing – cognitive –Step-by-step performance of task Associative –Movements refined and more efficient –Less dependent on cognition
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Autonomous stage –Movements are autonomous, do not require attention or conscious thought –Other activities can be done at the same time Walk and chew gum Cook and talk
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Procedural Memory Location –Frontal cortex –Thalamus –Basal ganglia
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