| Literature DB >> 20700383 |
Radek Ptak1, Martial Van der Linden, Armin Schnider.
Abstract
Memory disorders are among the most frequent and most debilitating cognitive impairments following acquired brain damage. Cognitive remediation strategies attempt to restore lost memory capacity, provide compensatory techniques or teach the use of external memory aids. Memory rehabilitation has strongly been influenced by memory theory, and the interaction between both has stimulated the development of techniques such as spaced retrieval, vanishing cues or errorless learning. These techniques partly rely on implicit memory and therefore enable even patients with dense amnesia to acquire new information. However, knowledge acquired in this way is often strongly domain-specific and inflexible. In addition, individual patients with amnesia respond differently to distinct interventions. The factors underlying these differences have not yet been identified. Behavioral management of memory failures therefore often relies on a careful description of environmental factors and measurement of associated behavioral disorders such as unawareness of memory failures. The current evidence suggests that patients with less severe disorders benefit from self-management techniques and mnemonics whereas rehabilitation of severely amnesic patients should focus on behavior management, the transmission of domain-specific knowledge through implicit memory processes and the compensation for memory deficits with memory aids.Entities:
Keywords: amnesia; episodic memory; errorless learning; memory disorders; memory rehabilitation; neural plasticity; prospective memory; spaced retrieval
Year: 2010 PMID: 20700383 PMCID: PMC2914528 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2010.00057
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Learning capacity, spatio-temporal orientation, awareness of the deficit, and independence in activities of daily living (ADL) as a function of the degree of memory impairment.
| I. Slight | May acquire and retain repeatedly presented information; recall is nearly normal when cues are provided; normal recognition | Normal | Good knowledge of own impairment; spontaneous application of strategies to improve performance | Complete for ADL; able to exercise professional activities when working place is adapted |
| II. Moderate | Partial acquisition of new information; strong interference effects; cueing helps, but does not normalize performance; recognition slightly impaired | Unstable for time and date | Frequent complaints; attempts to compensate for memory failures | Independence for routine tasks; impaired acquisition of new procedures; needs help with administrative tasks |
| III. Severe | Extremely limited; cueing has slight effects; recognition strongly impaired | Temporal disorientation (time, date) | Forgets being forgetful; ineffective coping strategies | Routine tasks must be called to mind; needs supervised training for the acquisition of new procedures |
| IV. Very severe | No acquisition of new information even after repeated exposure; cueing has no effects; feeling of knowing; recognition at chance | Constant spatial and temporal disorientation | Implicit notion that “something's wrong” | Only for the most habitual activities; shows little interest and initiative |
Figure 1Acquisition of names using errorless learning. (A) Amnesic patient SK learned to recall eight names of hospital staff depicted on photographs. He needed progressively less letter cues to recall these names; nevertheless, free recall remained unchanged across 15 sessions. (B) KA successfully acquired 10 names across 10 learning sessions. His performance gradually increased whether cued recall (only first letter provided) or free recall (immediate or delayed) were tested.