COGS 17 Handout 7 pg. 3
Handout 7 Learning/Memory and Language
Nature of learning (synaptic plasticity)
Definition:
a. Perceptual:
b. Motor:
c. Stimulus-response:
Examples:
Classical/Pavlovian conditioninga.
b. present ______(unconditioned stimulus), dog ______(unconditioned response)
c. turn on light (______stimulus) before presenting food
d. dog salivates to light (______response) / Instrumental/Operant learning
a. you study
b. you get an A
c. reward will increase/decrease probability of studying again
d. Relational: the relationships among individual stimuli (______, ______, ______)
Nature of memory
Definition:
Common Model of Memory processes
Squire’s taxonomy of memory
Hippocampus
What is it?
Functions:
- ______of memory (STM à LTM)
- acts as the “pointer” and as “links” sensory info together
- ______and ______memory (taxi driver studies showed that hippocampal volume correlated with
the experience)
- detection of ______stimuli
- ______(even as adult): growth of new neurons
Malfunctions:
- Severe anterograde amnesia:
- Mild retrograde amnesia:
- Problems navigating space
- Seizures
- most common origin is in the ______
- why? Because it is a ______circuit
- Susceptible to ______disease (first symptom of disease is the loss of STM)
- Hippocampus and depression
- smaller hippocampus in clinically depressed individuals due increased levels of ______(stress hormone)
Neuroanatomy
- ______circuit
Place cells
- Definition:
Activity Dependent Synaptic Plasticity
- increased/decreased strengthening is how associations are made
- neuroanatomical changes
-
-
-
- longer lasting change =
Language
Methods of communications:
What is the importance of communication?
a. Allows for ______
b. Allows for ______
Language acquisition
a. Is language genetic or is it learned?
a. Chomsky:
b. Is it unique to humans?
c. Are language and thought interrelated?
d. Universal language?
Birdsong
- The anatomy of birdsong (bird “language”) is similar to that in human systems. They have a ______.
- Acquisition of birdsong suggests that there is a ______for developing language. Birds that aren’t exposed to their species’ birdsong will not be able to detect it in the future.
- ______occurs every Spring when they learn different versions of songs
Non-human primates (our close relative)
- There have been many efforts to teach speech/symbols/language to apes
- Their system is highly dynamic or static?
- Vocalizations are ______meaning “AH”= snake and will always mean snake (AH is a made up vocalization)
- Slight lateralization
- There is a limit to what they can learn!! Adult monkeys know the same amount of words as a ______.
- There is debate whether or not they have the ability to learn language
o Savage-Rumbaugh believes:
o Pinker believes:
What is language?
a. Includes ______(phonetics, morphology, syntax, semantics)
b. ______(letters)
c. Ability to represent ______situations
d. Ability to articulate something new
e. Intention to communicate
f. Infinite system of communication
Why is language important?
a. Humans are the only species to use language with ______(rules governing word order) and ______properties
a. The dog bit the man vs. The man bit the dog
i. Different order of words changes meaning completely
b. Language comprehension is ______and______(something we take for granted)
a. ______task: shows it takes a lot longer to state the color of the words rather than the word itself
c. Language production is ______and involves ______systems
a. Alex the parrot could learn new sounds and manipulate words into a distinct order
Lateralization
Left hemisphere responsibilities / Right hemisphere responsibilitiesLanguage Disorders
- General knowledge
o Language disorders can be caused by many things
o Language disorders most commonly result from damage to the______hemisphere
o To test language dominance: use ______test
§ You inject ______into one hemisphere of the brain. It puts that one hemisphere to sleep and if language is affected you’ll know that that side of the brain is responsible for language
- Types
o Paraphasia:
o Neologism:
o Non-fluent speech:
o Agraphia:
o Alexia:
Aphasias
Broca’sWhere:
Symptoms: / Wernicke’s
Where:
Symptoms:
- Global aphasia:
- Damage to ______(fibers that connect Broca’s and Wernicke’s areas) causes inability to repeat spoken words
Language pathways
1. Repeating a spoken word
a. A1 à ______à ______à______à ______
2. Repeating a written word
a. V1 à ______à______à ______
Sign languages
Do they work the same way?
Other languages
- Evidence suggests all languages rely on same or different? circuits
- Kids learn languages way easier than adults
Dyslexia
- Problem ______, more common in ______who are ______
- Switch ______around (telephone becomes enohpelet)
- Acquired dyslexia = ______
- Deep dyslexia =
William’s Syndrome
- Genetic disorder (chromosome______)
- Extremely good at ______but can’t do ______, tend to be highly ______
- Almost a mirror image of an ______child
- This suggests that you can dissociate ______from ______; they are independent processes