Literature DB >> 12677555

[Memory and brain--neurobiological correlates of memory disturbances].

P Calabrese1, H J Markowitsch.   

Abstract

A differentiation of memory is possible on the basis of chronological and contents-related aspects. Furthermore, it is possible to make process-specific subdivisions (encoding, transfer, consolidation, retrieval). The time-related division on the one hand refers to the general differentiation into short-term and long-term memory, and, on the other, to that between anterograde and retrograde memory ("new" and "old memory"; measured from a given time point, usually that when brain damage occurred). Anterograde memory means the successful encoding and storing of new information; retrograde the ability to retrieve successfully acquired and/or stored information. On the contents-based level, memory can be divided into five basic long-term systems--episodic memory, the knowledge system, perceptual, procedural and the priming form of memory. Neural correlates for these divisions are discussed with special emphasis of the episodic and the knowledge systems, based both on normal individuals and brain-damaged subjects. It is argued that structures of the limbic system are important for encoding of information and for its transfer into long-term memory. For this, two independent, but interacting memory circuits are proposed--one of them controlling and integrating primarily the emotional, and the other primarily the cognitive components of newly incoming information. For information storage principally neocortical structures are regarded as important and for the recall of information from the episodic and semantic memory systems the combined action of portions of prefrontal and anterior temporal regions is regarded as essential. Within this fronto-temporal agglomerate, a moderate hemispheric-specificity is assumed to exist with the right-hemispheric combination being mainly engaged in episodic memory retrieval and the left-hemispheric in that of semantic information. Evidence for this specialization comes from the results from focally brain-damaged patients as well as from that functional brain imaging in normal human subjects. Comparing results from imaging studies in memory disturbed patients with brain damage and from patients with a psychiatric diagnosis (e. g., psychogenic amnesia) revealed that both patient groups demonstrate comparable metabolic changes on the brain level. It can therefore be concluded that in neurological patients distinct, identifiable tissue damage is existent, while in psychiatric patients changes in the brain's biochemistry (release of stress hormones, and transmitters) constitute the physiological bases for the memory disturbances.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12677555     DOI: 10.1055/s-2003-38506

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Fortschr Neurol Psychiatr        ISSN: 0720-4299            Impact factor:   0.752


  4 in total

1.  Functional MR imaging of psychogenic amnesia: a case report.

Authors:  Jong-Chul Yang; Gwang-Woo Jeong; Moo-Suk Lee; Heoung-Keun Kang; Sung-Jong Eun; Yong-Ku Kim; Yo-Han Lee
Journal:  Korean J Radiol       Date:  2005 Jul-Sep       Impact factor: 3.500

2.  Cerebral glucose utilisation in hepatitis C virus infection-associated encephalopathy.

Authors:  Meike Heeren; Karin Weissenborn; Dimitrios Arvanitis; Martin Bokemeyer; Annemarie Goldbecker; Argyro Tountopoulou; Thomas Peschel; Julian Grosskreutz; Hartmut Hecker; Ralph Buchert; Georg Berding
Journal:  J Cereb Blood Flow Metab       Date:  2011-06-01       Impact factor: 6.200

Review 3.  Attention, memory, and cognitive function in hepatic encephalopathy.

Authors:  Karin Weissenborn; Kathrin Giewekemeyer; Susanne Heidenreich; Martin Bokemeyer; Georg Berding; Björn Ahl
Journal:  Metab Brain Dis       Date:  2005-12       Impact factor: 3.584

Review 4.  Memory and self-neuroscientific landscapes.

Authors:  Hans J Markowitsch
Journal:  ISRN Neurosci       Date:  2013-05-14
  4 in total

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