Search for
Within
This book
All books
PubMed
NCBI
»
Bookshelf
»
Frontiers in Neuroscience
»
Neural Plasticity and Memory
»
frplas
Neural Plasticity and Memory
From Genes to Brain Imaging
Federico
Bermúdez-Rattoni
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
CRC Press, Taylor & Francis Group
0-8493-9070-2
978-0-8493-9070-8
2007
© 2007 by
Taylor & Francis Group, LLC
Frontiers in Neuroscience
Table of Contents
Series Preface
Preface
Editor
Contributors
1 Searching for Memory in the Brain: Confronting the Collusion of Cells and Systems
James L. McGaugh
ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY YEARS OF CONTROVERSY
THE GREAT DEBATE: WHAT IS LEARNED? KNOWLEDGE OR RESPONSES?
BRAIN SYSTEMS AND FORMS OF MEMORY
BRAIN SYSTEMS AND MEMORY FUNCTIONS
CELLS AND SYSTEMS
TWO CENTURIES OF PROGRESS IN RESEARCH ON BRAIN AND MEMORY
REFERENCES
2 Long-Term Potentiation and Depression as Putative Mechanisms for Memory Formation
Martha L. Escobar and Brian Derrick
INTRODUCTION
LONG-LASTING FORMS OF SYNAPTIC MODIFICATION: METHODOLOGICAL APPROACH
LTP AND LTD: TRIGGERING, EXPRESSION, AND MAINTENANCE MECHANISMS
PERSISTENT SYNAPTIC PLASTICITY: METAPLASTIC POINT OF VIEW
ROLE OF ACTIVITY-DEPENDENT SYNAPTIC PLASTICITY IN BRAIN FUNCTION
SUBSTRATES OF LTP AND LTD: STRUCTURAL PLASTICITY
NEUROTROPHINS AND SYNAPTIC PLASTICITY
EXPERIENCE-DEPENDENT MODIFICATIONS: IS LTP INVOLVED IN LEARNING AND MEMORY?
OUTSTANDING QUESTIONS AND NEW DIRECTIONS
REFERENCES
3 Molecular Mechanisms of Synaptic Plasticity Underlying Long-Term Memory Formation
Victor Ramirez-Amaya
INTRODUCTION
EARLY SIGNALS
CA
2+
AND ITS TRANSDUCER
IMMEDIATE EARLY GENES
TROPHIC FACTORS
CONCLUSIONS
REFERENCES
4 Modification of Brain Circuits through Experience
Mark R. Rosenzweig
BRAIN PLASTICITY DISCOVERED THROUGH SERENDIPITY
UNEXPECTED DISCOVERY OF BRAIN PLASTICITY
CEREBRAL EFFECTS OF EXPERIENCE OCCUR IN ALL SPECIES TESTED
ENRICHED ENVIRONMENTS AND THE BRAIN
NEUROCHEMICAL CASCADES UNDERLIE MODIFICATION OF NEURAL CIRCUITS
REFERENCES
5 Presynaptic Structural Plasticity and Long-Lasting Memory: Focus on Learning-Induced Redistribution of Hippocampal Mossy Fibers
Jerome L. Rekart, Matthew R. Holahan, and Aryeh Routtenberg
LEARNING AND STRUCTURAL PLASTICITY
HIPPOCAMPAL GRANULE CELL AXON TERMINALS AND LEARNING
MECHANISMS OF PRESYNAPTIC STRUCTURAL PLASTICITY
PRESYNAPTIC DISPARITY: ANTI-BOUTONISM OR BIOLOGICAL REALITY?
REFERENCES
6 Electrophysiological Representation of Taste Memory
Takashi Yamamoto and Yasunobu Yasoshima
INTRODUCTION
CTA PARADIGM
ENHANCED RESPONSES TO CS
ALTERATION OF RESPONSES REFLECTING HEDONIC SHIFT
CS–US ASSOCIATION
IMPORTANCE OF AMYGDALA IN CTA FORMATION
INVOLVEMENT OF REWARD SYSTEM
SUMMARY
REFERENCES
7 Changes in Neurotransmitter Extracellular Levels during Memory Formation
Maria Isabel Miranda
INTRODUCTION
FREE MOVING MICRODIALYSIS TECHNIQUE
ACETYLCHOLINE RELEASE DURING MOTOR ACTIVITY, ATTENTION, AND NOVELTY
NOVELTY AND OTHER NEUROTRANSMITTER RELEASES
LESIONS AND BLOCKADE OF CHOLINERGIC ACTIVITY DURING MEMORY FORMATION
ACETYLCHOLINE AND LONG-TERM MEMORY TASKS
NORADRENALINE RELEASE DURING MEMORY FORMATION
GLUTAMATE AND GABA RELEASE DURING MEMORY FORMATION
CONCLUSIONS
REFERENCES
8 Reversible Inactivation of Brain Circuits in Learning and Memory Research
Milagros Gallo
INTRODUCTION
BRAIN LESION APPROACH AND DYNAMIC NATURE OF LEARNING AND MEMORY SYSTEMS
REVERSIBLE INACTIVATION TECHNIQUES
LEARNING BEHAVIORAL MODELS AND REVERSIBLE INACTIVATION TECHNIQUES
DISSOCIATING INDEPENDENT LEARNING AND MEMORY PROCESSES
SUMMARY
REFERENCES
9 Enhanced Learning Protects Brain against Effects of Amnesic Treatments
Roberto A. Prado-Alcalá, Rigoberto Salado-Castillo, César Quiroz, María Eugenia Garín-Aguilar, Arnulfo Díaz-Trujillo, Selva Rivas-Arancibia, and Gina L. Quírarte
INTRODUCTION
PROTECTIVE EFFECT OF ENHANCED TRAINING
OVERTRAINING OF POSITIVELY REINFORCED LEARNING
TWO MODELS
CONCLUSIONS
REFERENCES
10 Studies of Short-Term Avoidance Memory
Martín Cammarota, Lia R.M. Bevilaqua, Jorge H. Medina, and Iván Izquierdo
SUMMARY
INTRODUCTION
STM AND LTM: PARALLEL OR SEQUENTIAL?
ROLE OF HIPPOCAMPUS IN SHORT- AND LONG-TERM AVOIDANCE MEMORY
ROLE OF ENTORHINAL CORTEX IN SHORT- AND LONG-TERM AVOIDANCE MEMORY
ROLES OF OTHER CORTICAL REGIONS AND AMYGDALA IN SHORT- AND LONG-TERM AVOIDANCE MEMORY
NEUROBIOLOGICAL SEPARATION OF SHORT- AND LONG-TERM AVOIDANCE MEMORY
STM AND LTM ARE BEHAVIORALLY DIFFERENT
BIOCHEMISTRY OF SHORT-TERM MEMORY
PHARMACOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF IA WORKING MEMORY
CONCLUSIONS
REFERENCES
11 Memory Reconsolidation or Updating Consolidation?
Carlos J. Rodriguez-Ortiz and Federico Bermúdez-Rattoni
INTRODUCTION
CONSOLIDATION HYPOTHESIS
RECONSOLIDATION ERA
ON RESTRAINTS OF RECONSOLIDATION HYPOTHESIS
CONSOLIDATION AND RECONSOLIDATION: THE SAME PROCESS?
RECONSOLIDATION HYPOTHESIS RECONSIDERED: UPDATING CONSOLIDATION PROPOSAL
REFERENCES
12 Memory Impairments Associated with Stress and Aging
Carmen Sandi
STRESS
AGING
CONCLUSIONS
REFERENCES
13 Adrenal Stress Hormones and Enhanced Memory for Emotionally Arousing Experiences
Christa K. McIntyre and Benno Roozendaal
INTRODUCTION
STRESS HORMONE EFFECTS ON MEMORY CONSOLIDATION
STRESS HORMONES SELECTIVELY ENHANCE MEMORY CONSOLIDATION OF EMOTIONALLY AROUSING EXPERIENCES
INVOLVEMENT OF AMYGDALA IN MEDIATING STRESS HORMONE EFFECTS ON MEMORY CONSOLIDATION
ROLE OF EMOTIONAL AROUSAL-INDUCED NORADRENERGIC ACTIVATION WITHIN AMYGDALA IN ENABLING EPINEPHRINE AND GLUCOCORTICOID EFFECTS ON MEMORY CONSOLIDATION
CONCLUSIONS
REFERENCES
14 Neuro-Immune Associative Learning
Gustavo Pacheco-López, Maj-Britt Niemi, Harald Engler, and Manfred Schedlowski
INTRODUCTION
PHENOMENON: ASSOCIATION BETWEEN EXTEROCEPTIVE AND IMMUNE STIMULI
THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK FOR NEURO-IMMUNE ASSOCIATIVE LEARNING
NEUROBIOLOGY OF NEURO-IMMUNE ASSOCIATIVE LEARNING
BIOLOGICAL RELEVANCE OF NEURO-IMMUNE ASSOCIATIVE LEARNING
CLINICAL RELEVANCE OF NEURO-IMMUNE ASSOCIATIVE LEARNING
SUMMARY AND FUTURE PERSPECTIVE
REFERENCES
15 Human Brain Imaging Studies of Emotional Memory: Uncovering Influences of Sex and Hemisphere
Larry Cahill
INTRODUCTION
THE AMYGDALA: BUILT TO MODULATE
HUMAN SUBJECT STUDIES RELATING AMYGDALA ACTIVITY TO EMOTIONAL MEMORY
AN ASIDE ON SEX DIFFERENCES IN THE BRAIN
SEX-RELATED INFLUENCES ON AMYGDALA RELATION TO MEMORY FOR EMOTIONAL EVENTS
SEX DIFFERENCES IN HUMAN AMYGDALA FUNCTIONAL CONNECTIVITY AT REST
POTENTIAL RELATIONSHIP OF SEX-RELATED AMYGDALA HEMISPHERIC SPECIALIZATION TO HEMISPHERIC GLOBAL AND LOCAL PROCESSING BIAS
SOME IMPLICATIONS FOR DISEASE STATES
SUMMARY
REFERENCES
List of Figures
Copyright © 2007 by
Taylor & Francis Group, LLC
Help
ǀ
Contact Bookshelf
Expand All
Collapse All