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Search For The Engram
Description
Biological (Memory & Learning) Mind Map on Search For The Engram, created by n.c.wetmore on 25/04/2013.
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biological
memory & learning
biological
memory & learning
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n.c.wetmore
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n.c.wetmore
over 11 years ago
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Resource summary
Search For The Engram
Lashleys Search for the Engram
By strengthening the CS and UCS centre in brain, any excitation of CS flow to UCS evoking UCR
the physical representation of what has been learnt
If learning depends on new or strengthened connections between two brain areas, knife cut should interrupt and abolish learned response.
Rats on maze and brightness discrimination task, made deep cuts in locations in cerebral cortices
None impaired performances.
Types of learning that he studied didn't depend on connections across cortex
Does any portion of the cerebral cortex is more important than others for learning?
Trained rats before or after he removed large portions of the cortex
Lesions impaired performance but deficit depended more on amount of brain damage than its location
Learning and memory apparently didn't rely on a single cortical area
Proposed two principles about nervous system
Equipotentiality
all parts of cortex contribute equally to complex behaviours like learning, and any part of cortex can substitute for any other
mass of action
cortex works as a whole, more cortex is better
Another interpretation of findings
Rat finding way to food attends to visual and tactile stimuli, location of body, position of head and other cues.
depends on many cortical areas, but different areas could be contributing in different ways
Modern Search for the Engram
Search in cerebellum
Thompson & col studied classical conditioning of eyelid responses in rabbits
First tone (CS) then puff of air (UCS) to cornea of rabbits eye
Rabbit blinked at air puff and not tone and later blinked at tone also
recorded activity in various brain cells to find which ones changed their responses during learning
Thompson wanted to determine location of learning
A<B<C<D<E<F<
If we damage one of areas, learning will be impaired but can't be sure that learning occurred in the damaged area
Thompson identified one nucleus of cerebellum
Lateral Interpositus Nucleus (LIP
At start, little response but as learning proceeded, responses increased
Thompson (1986)
When inv temp suppressed nucleus in an untrained rabbit and presented CS and UCS, no responses shown during training
when LIP recovered, began to learn but learned at the same speed as animals that had received no previous training
while LIP suppressed, training had no effect
INV suppressed activity in red nucleus
midbrain motor area that receives input from the cerebellum
R showed no responses during training
when recovered, R showed strong learned responses to the tone
Temp prevented response but didn't prevent learning
Learning did not require activity in the red nucleus
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