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1)skelemotor 2)oculomotor 3)dorsolateral prefrontal cortex 4)lateral orbitofrontal ctx 5)anterior cingulate/medial orbitofrontal ctx 6)inferior temporal ctx |
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parallel processing hypothesis |
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multiple segregated loops, no integration |
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information funneling hypothesis |
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absolute convergence, -cortical neurons>striatal neurons -areas of ctx far apart project to adjacent areas of striatum -striatal cells synapse across a broad area of GP and SN. |
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high Ach/sensorimotor, non patches low Ach/limbic areas, on patches |
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Parkinson's Disease etiology |
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adult onset, genetic without 100% penetrance -One hypothesis is that it results from a genetic susceptibility to an environmental factor -loss of DA input to striatum from SNpc -loss must involve over 90% of cells before symptoms appear |
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Parkinson's Clinical Systems: MOTOR |
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tremor coghweel rigidity shuffling steps akinesia bradykinesia dystonia |
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Parkinson's Clinical Systems: NONMOTOR |
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-cognitive slowing -difficulty with tasks requiring high level processing -depression |
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difficulty maintaining or beginning a body motion |
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slowness of movement, paucity or incompleteness of mov't |
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sustained involuntary muscle contractions and spasms |
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<-L-DOPA -transplantation of fetal tissue -pallidotomy -deep brain stimulation (DPS) |
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taken up by DA terminals in striatum: converted to DA and then released. -not effective for long term treatment -patients develop tolerance -has many side effects |
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cells in postevoventral GPi are surgically ablated either unilaterally or bilaterally |
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surgical treatment involving implantation of brain pacemaker, which sends electrical impulses to brain. stimulates GPe |
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motor learning/coordination and cognition |
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motor learning/coordination of cerebellum |
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-combines and coordinates rapid, skilled mov'ts -controls and corrects compound, complex mov'ts through feedback and timing -gains control through trial and error -with time and practice control passes from effortful to effortless |
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cognitive functions of cerebellum |
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-learning -cognitive processing of words -anticipations/planning -making time-based judgments -PET and fMRI activation --imagined or passively observed mov't --verb generation task --decreased activation when task is well-practiced --connections to PFC |
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-initial state of rigor -rigor subsides -inaccurate and exagerated mov't (dysmetria) -incoordination (ataxia) -hypotonia -intention tremors (starts/stops problem) during voluntary mov'ts |
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output 0.8 M, source: deep nuclei |
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input 20 M, mossy fibers, source: CTX (pontine nucleus) [PONS] |
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input 0.5M, climbing fibers, source: spinal cord and brainstem nuclei |
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less learning = more mass removed |
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reduced response with same stimulus |
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increased response to habituated stimulus when presented with aversive stimulus |
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enhancement of synaptic strength as a result of repetitive activity. can be induced by a single high F stimulus and last for days |
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synaptic weakening, low F stimulation over a longer period. Can counteract LTP and vice versa |
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only those synapses that are activated during stimulation are enhanced in LTP |
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if one pathway is weakly activated, while another is strongly activated, both show LTP. seen in hebbian learning |
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synaptic efficacy similar to LTP but follows a normal learning experience |
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dendritic spines can change due to LTP in these ways: |
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-increase in size -perforated synapses -spines completely splitting -new spines forming |
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within a few minutes/hours after encoding, changes in gene expression, protein synthesis, and synaptic plasticity |
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takes days, months, or years. reorganization of brain regions that support the memory. when a new brain region is needed for the memory-declarative and non declarative |
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standard consolidation theory of dec. mem consolidation |
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Definition
hippo-C rapidly encodes an integrated representation of event/concept, slowly transferred to CTX and becomes independent of hippo-C |
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multiple trace theory of dec. mem. consolidation |
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episodic memories are always dependent on Hippo-C. Temporal gradient is dependent not on transfer to CTX but on # of traces stored in Hippo-C. Thus, partial damage of Hippo-C would yield temporally graded amnesia |
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Interleaved learning theory of dec. mem. consolidation |
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particular item isn't learned all at once but through a series of presentations intermixed with exposure to other examples of same domain. |
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declarative memory functions are strongly associated with : |
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Medial Temporal Lobes, and Frontal and Parietal Lobes |
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within Medial Temporal Lobe, key structure is Hippocampus. It encodes: |
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spatial, relational, and episodic memory |
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____________influence both memory and context |
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episodic retrieval is done in: |
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anterior prefrontal regions |
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left dorsolateral prefrontal regions |
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familiarity/monitoring happens in |
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right dorsolateral prefrontal regions |
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semantic retrieval happens in |
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language areas in (L) inferior frontal gyrus |
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episodic retrieval happens in: |
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posterior lateral parietal and posterior midline (deactivated during episodic encoding) |
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encoding requires ______consolidation |
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storage requires _______consolidation |
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molecular layer of cerebellum |
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mostly Purkinje cell dendrites and afferents |
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purkinje cells and special computational features |
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receives mossy fiber input, billions of neurons, cerebellar glomeruli, axons ascend into molecular layer where they form PF's |
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sends state info about periphery and other brain centers MF->granule celle -> purkinje cell pathway |
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arise from Inferior Olive, contacts only one Purkinje cell. |
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3 cerebellum subdivisions |
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vernal (medial) zone, intermediate zone, lateral zone |
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