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The Neural Mechanisms of Learning

Its all physical!. The Neural Mechanisms of Learning. Neural basis of learning. Basic structure of the nervous system is set before birth Neurons are however flexible living cells that can grow new connections

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The Neural Mechanisms of Learning

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  1. Its all physical! The Neural Mechanisms of Learning

  2. Neural basis of learning • Basic structure of the nervous system is set before birth • Neurons are however flexible living cells that can grow new connections • The ability of the brain to reorganise the way it works is referred to as plasticity • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=90cj4NX87Yk

  3. Neural Basis of learning Synaptic knob Axon terminals synapse Myelin sheath Axon

  4. Synapse • Synapse involves: • 1/ Synaptic gap • 2/ Presynaptic neuron • 3/ Postsynaptic neuron

  5. Neural Basis of learning

  6. Hebbian Learning • Learning involves the establishment and strengthening of neural connections at the synapse. • Learning results in the creation of cell assembles or neural networks • ‘neurons that fire together wire together’

  7. Neurotransmitters and LTP • Drugs that enhance synaptic transmission tend to enhance learning • NMDA (N-methyl-D-aspartate) a neurotransmitter receptor found on dendrites in the hippocampal region • NMDA specialised to work with the neurotransmitter glutamate • Important role in LTP • Neurotransmitter dopamine also plays a role in learning

  8. NMDA and LTP • Genetically engineered rats with more efficient NMDA receptors showed: • Better memory • Faster learning • As compared to rats with normal NMDA receptors

  9. Long term potentiation and the hippocampus – rats in a water maze • LTP crucial for not only memory but also LEARNING • Richard Morris experiment (1982) • Pool of milky water with platform to stand on (just under the surface) • 3 groups of rats • Group 1 – Frontal lobe damage • Group 2 – Hippocampus damage • Group 3 – No damage

  10. Long term potentiation and the hippocampus – rats in a water maze • Results display the importance of the hippocampus in allowing LTP • Group 3 – no damage – located platform more quickly each trial • Group 1 – frontal lobe damage – performed about as well as group 3 • Group 2 – hippocampus damage – never got better, showed no evidence of learning

  11. Neural Plasticity • Plasticity is the ability of the brain’s neural structure or function to be changed by experience throughout the lifespan. • Two types: • 1/ Developmental Plasticity • 2/ Adaptive plasticity • Unclear whether or not all brain structures are as plastic as the sensory and motor cortices

  12. Rosenzweig studies • Lab rats placed in 3 different environments after birth with different opportunities for learning • 1 – standard environment – simple communal cage with food and water • 2 – impoverished environment – simple small cage housed alone • 3 – enriched environment – large, social, with lots of stimulus objects • All rats stayed in their cages for 80 days

  13. Rosenzweigstudies • When their brains were dissected the rats with enriched experience had thicker, heavier cerebral cortex • Thicker bushier dendrites (LTP) • More neurotransmitter acetylcholine • Brain weight increase as much as 10% • Neural connections increase as much as 20%

  14. Other Plasticity studies • The brains of university graduates have approx 40% more neural connections than those who leave school early! (2006) • Intellectual stimulation can protect against dementia! (2004) • This is even true for twins who have identical genetic make up

  15. Developmental plasticity • Changes in the brain’s neural structure in response to experience during its growth and development • Synaptogenesis– new neural connections • Synaptic pruning – removal of synaptic connections that are no longer needed • Adults have 40% less neural connections than a 3 year old!

  16. Developmental plasticity • Babies born with all 100 billion nerve cells • Each cell at birth synapses with around 2500 other neurons • By late childhood the number of connections increases to around 15,000 per neuron • By adulthood this number decreases to around 8,000 as unused connections are destroyed • Children’s brains show greater plasticity than adults, this might explain why children learn languages faster than adults

  17. Developmental plasticity • Sensitive period – time an organism more is responsive to certain stimulation • Lack of stimulation can lead to long term deficit • E.g. Closed eye from birth leads to later blindness even when eye eventually opened • Language acquisition has a sensitive period

  18. Genie

  19. Adaptive plasticity • The brain reorganises the way neurons in different regions operate in response to a deficit • Deficits can occur from birth or as a result of brain damage • Rerouting – neurons near damaged area seek new active connections with healthy neurons • Sprouting – new dendrites grow • Allows shifting of function from damaged area to healthy area

  20. Damage from birth - congenital • Congenital – E.g. People who are blind from birth may have occipital lobes that are used for senses other than vision • This may explain why people who are blind from birth have very good hearing or tactile sensitivity

  21. Damage from injury • When a particular brain area is damaged e.g. stroke other brain areas can ‘take up the slack’ • This is what happens when people ‘recover’ from brain damage • Nerve cells do not regrow, rather other neurons take over the functions of the damaged cell

  22. Use of Imaging technologies to localise changes in the brain due to learning • Comparative brain scans can be conducted • fMRI, PET and SPECT effective to monitor brain function before and after learning • MRI scans of London taxi drivers show larger rear hippocampus regions (responsible for spatial navigation) as compared to London bus drivers.

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