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Showing posts with label memory. Show all posts
Showing posts with label memory. Show all posts

Sunday

Enhanced Memory for the Unexpected

Surprise! Neural Mechanism May Underlie an Enhanced Memory for the Unexpected



ScienceDaily (Feb. 25, 2010) — The human brain excels at using past experiences to make predictions about the future. However, the world around us is constantly changing, and new events often violate our logical expectations.




"We know these unexpected events are more likely to be remembered than predictable events, but the underlying neural mechanisms for these effects remain unclear," says lead researcher, Dr. Nikolai Axmacher, from the University of Bonn in Germany.

Dr. Axmacher and colleagues, whose new study is published by Cell Press in the February 25 issue of the journal Neuron, investigated the relationship between novelty processing and memory formation in two key brain structures, the hippocampus, and the nucleus accumbens. The hippocampus plays a key role in memory formation while the nucleus accumbens is involved in processing rewards and novel information. Previous work had suggested that information transfer between these structures may be associated with enhanced memory for unexpected items or events.

Obtaining direct information on the electrical activity of these structures deep in the brain is usually impossible in humans. However, the researchers used the opportunity to record from two groups of patients with electrodes implanted in these regions: Epilepsy patients awaiting surgical treatment of severe epilepsy, and patients with treatment-resistant depression undergoing deep-brain stimulation. Both groups of participants studied pictures of faces and houses in grayscale that were usually presented on a red or green background, respectively. Occasionally, a picture would have an "unexpected" configuration, such as a face on a green background. Subjects were subsequently tested for their memory of the expected and unexpected items.


The researchers discovered that unexpected stimuli enhanced an early and a late electrical potential in the hippocampus and the late signal was associated with a memory for the unexpected picture. In the nucleus accumbens, there was only a late potential which was larger during exposure to unexpected items. "Our findings support the idea that hippocampal activity may initially signal the occurrence of an unexpected event and that the nucleus accumbens may influence subsequent processing which serves to promote memory encoding," explains Dr. Axmacher.


The authors are careful to point out that one limitation of their study is that the recordings from the hippocampus and nucleus accumbens came from two separate groups of subjects, so their data provide an indirect measure of the functional connectivity between these two brain areas. However, their findings do provide fascinating new insight into this complex brain circuit. "Taken together, these are the first results that speak to the relative timing of expectation effects in different regions of the human brain, and they support models of accumbens-hippocampus interactions during encoding of unexpected events," concludes Dr. Axmacher.

Tuesday

Hypertext as a virtual landscape


If hypertext is a virtual landscape, we should consider the effect that time has upon topographical features.

No matter how solid they may seem, they are inexorably altered through processes of erosion and accretion. This is true whether the landscape is one of rock and soil or of words. Textual topography is formed in the reader's mind, where much of the textual content seems to erode as it fades in memory. Yet at the same time, new significance can accrete to many remembered passages as further reading sheds new light on them.

The relationships that comprise topographical contours in hypertext thus change gradually during the reading in often subtle ways.


Robert Kendall - - Time. The final frontier


Download ebooks on http://www.frenchtheory.com/ - See that post with different algorithms in metabole - See the journal French Metablog with today different posts -



Rules and memory

You are remembered for the rules you break.
Douglas MacArthur


Download ebooks on http://www.frenchtheory.com/ - See that post with different algorithms in metabole - See the journal French Metablog with today different posts.

Friday

What defines concept




`It is the organization of memory that defines what concepts are'.


Hypertext uses machine memory in a way that has no analogue in the traditional text environment, where composition relies on the organization of human memory. It is the organization of memory in the computer and in the mind that defines hypertext and makes it fundamentally different from conventional text.


Slatin


See the journal French Metablog with today different posts
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Sunday

Alternative representations

Access to a film on a PC or a video screen is not the same thing as viewing it in the cinema anymore than a print of a painting is the same thing as the painting itself, but in all these cases these alternative representations serve at worst as acceptable memory objects within scholarly argument. They are, in short, very much different than original.s

At first glance this may not seem to be all that important until we remind ourselves that these new textual objects, call it what you will, are not really the same than originals .

See that post with different algorithms in metabole
See the journal French Metablog with today different posts
Enter Hypertextual as a member

Thursday

I forgot


"They were all required to drink a measure of the water, and those who were not saved by their good sense, drank more than the measure, and each one as he drank forgot all things."


[Plato, Republic 10.618a]
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See that post with different algorithms in metabole
See the journal French Metablog with today different posts

Wednesday

Beyond the reach of words


Memory, for Hegel, is the learning by rote of names, or of words considered as names, and it can therefore not be separated from the notation, the inscription, or the writing down of these names.


In order to remember, one is forced to write down what one is likely to forget. The idea in other words, makes its sensory appearance, in Hegel, as the material inscription of names. Thought is entirely dependent on a mental faculty that is mechanical through and through, as remote as can be from the sounds and the images of the imagination or from the dark mine of recollection, which lies beyond the reach of words and of thought.


Download ebooks on http://www.frenchtheory.com/
See that post with different algorithms in metabole
See the journal French Metablog with today different posts