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PRESENTER-DR.ASHISH
KUMAR(JR1)
CHAIRPERSON-DR.DILEEP KUMAR
MAURYA (SR)
1
DISORDER OF MEMORY
Memory is the encoding, storage, retrieval of
what was learned earlier (Morgan& king)
2
DEFINITION OF MEMORY
A THEORY OF GENERAL MEMORY FUNCTIONS
INFORMATION-PROCESSING THEORIES
3
THEORIES
According to this theory, Three distinct processes of memory have been
identified. These are an encoding process, a storage process, and a
retrieval .
Encoding is the process of receiving, sensory input and transforming it
into a form, or code, which can be stored;
storage is the process of process actually putting coded information
into memory
retrieval is the process of gaining access to stored, coded information
when it is needed.
4
A THEORY OF GENERAL MEMORY
FUNCTION
5
INFORMATION PROCESSING MODEL
Stimuli Attention
Maintenance & Elaborative
Rehearsal
Encode
Retrieve
Sensory
Memory
Working
Memory
Long-Term
Memory
Forgotten Forgotten
Memory
Sensory
memory .
Short Term
Memory.
Long term
memory.
Explicit
Memory
Episodic
memory
Semantic
Memory
Implicit
Memory
6
SENSORY MEMORY
Registered for each of
the senses.
Fades within few seconds.
7
Facilitate rapid processing
of incoming stimuli.
Selective attention allows for the sifting of relevant material from
sensory memory for further processing and storage in short-term
memory
SHORT TERM/WORKING
MEMORY
Allow for the Storage of memories for much longer than few seconds available to sensory memory.
Aids constant updating of one’s surroundings.
Sensitive to disorders of brain tissue- such as AD
Ex: If you saw a person walking a dog and few seconds later heard a dog bark you would not be
surprised since you would identify the likely source of the sound from sensory(visual) memory that
had been processed and encoded in short term memory.
8
Long-term memory.
Declarative/Explicit/
Relational
Non declarative/
Implicit/Procedural/
Skills.
9
EXPLICIT / DECLARATIVE /
RELATIONAL MEMORY
Deals with facts and events, available to conscious for declaration.
Common examples: 5-minute recalls, asking the patient what they
had for breakfast.
1.Semantic memory/ memory for abstract facts: What is
the capital of India?
2.Episodic memory/ memory for specific events: What did
you have for breakfast?
Person is conscious of what they are remembering.
Stored in Hippocampus.
10
AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL MEMORY
Characterized by-
 General recall of event.
 An interpretation of event.
 Recall of few specific details.
 A type of episodic memory.
 Associated with the active experience
of remembering
11
Memories of events and issues that
relate to oneself.
(Married? Wedding day?).
IMPLICIT/PROCEDURAL/SKILLS
MEMORY
12
Performance of tasks such as typing , swimming or cutting a loaf of bread.
Expressions of prior learning.
No active awareness that memory is being searched in undertaking particular skill.
Stored in limbic system, amygdala and cerebellum.
When memories have been rehearsed in short term memory
, they are encoded into long term memory
Storage of material in long term memory allows for recall of
events from past and for the utilisation of information learnt
through the education ststem
It is resilient to attack. Hippocampus is particulary imortant
in transfer of memory from short term to long term
13
LONG TERM MEMORY
Long-term memory
Explicit: (declarative)-Person is
conscious that they are
remembering
Episodic:
Memory for
specific events
Semantic:
Memory for
abstract facts
Non declarative (procedural): There is
no active awareness that memory is being
searched in undertaking the particular skill
14
PROCESS OF REMEMBERING HAS FOUR
PARTS
15
Registration
Retention
Retrieval
Recall
16
Memory Impairment
Amnesia -
Loss of memory
Paramnesia-
Distortions of
Memory
Hyperamnesia-
Exaggerated
registration, retention
and recall.
• Normal memory decay.
• interference from related material
• Proactive interference (old-new).
• Retroactive interference (new-old).
AMNESIAS
17
Partial or total inability to recall past
experiences and events.
May be Organic or psychogenic
Due to-
Amnesia
Psychogenic
Dissociative
amnesia
Katathymic
Amnesia
Organic
Acute
Subacute
Chronic
Others
18
PSYCHOGENIC AMNESIAS
19
• Sudden amnesia during periods of extreme trauma.
Amnesia for personal identity.(Name, address, history,)and
personal events
person behaves appropriately to their background and
education
• May be associated with fugue.
• Common in those with h/o head injury in the past.
• Ability to perform complex behaviours is maintained.
1. Dissociative/ hysterical amnesia:
20
• Inability to recall specific painful memories.
• Due to defense mechanism of repression.
• More persistent and circumscribed.
• Trigger/ psychotherapeutic intervention makes memory
available to consciousness.
• Lasts for many years.
• There is no loss of personal identity
2. Katathymic amnesia/ motivated forgetting:
ORGANIC AMNESIAS
21
• Memory is poor owing to disorders of perception and attention.
• There is failure to encode material in long term memory.
• Acute head injury there is amnesia –retrograde amnesia , which
embraces the events just before the injury
anterograde amnesia is amnesia occuring after the injury
• Black outs- Anterograde amnesia in alcohol dependent patients.
 Indicate reversible brain damage.
 Delirium- infection,epilepsy.
1. Acute brain disease:
22
Unable to register new memories
Antero grade and retrograde amnesia
Antero grade amnesia –inability to learn new memories
Retrograde amnesia –inability to recall previously learned material
Remote memory: intact
 Korsakoff’s syndrome is the amnestic syndome caused by thiamine deficiency
Other cause - cerobrovascular disease, multiple sclerosis ,ECT
2. Subacute coarse brain disease:
23
• Amnesia extending over many years.
• Memory for recent events is lost before that for remote events.
• Ribot’s law of memory regression.
3. Chronic coarse brain disease:
OTHER AMNESIA.
Anxiety amnesia –occurs when there is
anxious preoccupation or poor
concentration such as depressive illness
or generalised anxiety
Depressive pseudo dementia- more
severe form of amnesia in depressive
disorder
Occurs D/t impaired concentration and
resolve once underlying disorder is
treated.
,
PARAMNESIA
25
 Occur in normal subjects due to
process of normal forgetting.
 Emotional problems and organic
states.
1. Distortions of recall
2. Distortions of recognition
26
PARAMNESIA
DISTORTIONS OF
RECALL
Retrospective
Falsification.
False Memory
Screen Memory
Confabulation
Pseudologia
Fantastica
Munchausen's
Syndrome
Vorbeireden
Cryptamnesia
Retrospective Delusion
DISTORTIONS OF
RECOGNITION
Déjà vu
Deja entendu.
Jamais Vu.
Deja Pense.
DISTORTIONS OF RECALL
27
• Unintentional distortion occurs when it filtered through a person's
current emotional, experiential and cognitive state
• The depressed patient describes all past experiences in negative terms
due to the impact of his current mood.
• So a depressed person will highlight their failures while ignoring
and/or forgetting about their successes
• retrospective falsification is inversely related to the degree of insight
1. Retrospective falsification:
28
• False memory - Recollection of an event which did not occur but
which the individual believes did take place
• Source amnesia: Difficulty in remembering the source from
which the information was acquired.(from one's own recall or
external source)
2. False memory/ Memory distrust syndrome :
29
• Recollection that is partially true and partially false.
• Recalls only part of true memory.
• Childhood sexual abuse by neighbour, since too painful to
recall it to be done by brother.
3. Screen memory:
30
• Falsification of memory occurring in clear consciousness in
association with organic pathology.
• Filling in of gaps in memory by imagined or untrue experiences
• 2 Broad patterns- Embarassed type -more common- fill in
gaps of memory as a result of awareness of deficit.
• Fantastic type- lacunae are filled in by details, exceeding the
need of memory.
4. Confabulation:
31
• Fluent plausible lying/ pathological lying
confabulation that occurs in those without organic brain
pathology such as personality disorder of anti social and
hysterical type.
• Typically the subject describes various major events and
traumas or makes grandiose claims, and these often
present at a time of personal crisis, such as facing legal
proceedings
• These individuals Admit their lying.
5. Pseudologia fantastica:
32
•Variant of pathological lying in which the individual presents
to the hospital with bogus medical illness complex medical
histories and often multiple surgical scars
•Munchausen’s by proxy -A proxy form of this condition
has been described in which the individual, usually a parent,
produces a factitious illness in someone else, generally their
child. This may lead to repeated presentations to hospital
over a prolonged period of time, and both diagnosis and
management can be very challenging in these cases.
6. Munchausen’s syndrome:
33
• Vorbeireden ( approximate answering)
Patient understands the question but deliberately avoids the
correct answer
• Clouding of consciousness with disorientation, Auditory and
visual hallucination ,conversion symptoms and recent head
injury
• Ganser observed this amnesia in four criminals to avoid court
appearance
7. Vorbeireden or approximate answers:
34
approximate answers described by Ganser.
• Clouding of consciousness with disorientation,pseudohallucination
• Recent history of head injury, typhus or severe emotional stress.
• Amnesia for the period during which the above symptoms were
manifest.
35
• Experience of not remembering that one is remembering.
• A person writes a witty passage and does not realize that
they are quoting from some passage they have seen
elsewhere rather than writing something original.
8. Cryptamnesia:
36
• The psychotic patient backdates his delusions in spite of the clear
evidence that the illness is of recent origin
• They will say that they have always been persecuted or they
have always been evil.
9. Retrospective delusions:
DISTORTIONS OF RECOGNITION
Déjà vu:
Problem with familiarity of
places and events.
Feeling of having
experienced current event in
past, although it has no basis
in fact.
Deja entendu:
Feeling of auditory
recognition.
Jamais vu:
Event has been experienced
before but is not presently
associated with appropriate
feelings of familiarity.
Deja pense:
New thought recognized as
having previously occurred.
37
THANK YOU
• Exaggerated registration, retention and recall.
Flashbulb memories: are those memories
that are associated with intense emotion,
they are unusually vivid, detailed and long
lasting.For ex.the 9/11 terrorist bombings
39
HYPERAMNESIA
40
•Flash backs: Sudden intrusive memories that are
associated with cognitive and emotional experiences of traumatic
events like such an accident
• One of characteristic symptom of PTSD. Also associated with
substance misuse disorders , emotional events.
• Flashbacks involving hallucinogenic experiences can occur in
association with hallucinogenic drugs and possibly cannabis use
after the short-term effects have worn off
• Eidetic images: Visual memories of almost hallucinatory vividness.
due to substance misuse, especially hallucinogenic agents.

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disorder of memory ppt.pptx

  • 2. Memory is the encoding, storage, retrieval of what was learned earlier (Morgan& king) 2 DEFINITION OF MEMORY
  • 3. A THEORY OF GENERAL MEMORY FUNCTIONS INFORMATION-PROCESSING THEORIES 3 THEORIES
  • 4. According to this theory, Three distinct processes of memory have been identified. These are an encoding process, a storage process, and a retrieval . Encoding is the process of receiving, sensory input and transforming it into a form, or code, which can be stored; storage is the process of process actually putting coded information into memory retrieval is the process of gaining access to stored, coded information when it is needed. 4 A THEORY OF GENERAL MEMORY FUNCTION
  • 5. 5 INFORMATION PROCESSING MODEL Stimuli Attention Maintenance & Elaborative Rehearsal Encode Retrieve Sensory Memory Working Memory Long-Term Memory Forgotten Forgotten
  • 6. Memory Sensory memory . Short Term Memory. Long term memory. Explicit Memory Episodic memory Semantic Memory Implicit Memory 6
  • 7. SENSORY MEMORY Registered for each of the senses. Fades within few seconds. 7 Facilitate rapid processing of incoming stimuli. Selective attention allows for the sifting of relevant material from sensory memory for further processing and storage in short-term memory
  • 8. SHORT TERM/WORKING MEMORY Allow for the Storage of memories for much longer than few seconds available to sensory memory. Aids constant updating of one’s surroundings. Sensitive to disorders of brain tissue- such as AD Ex: If you saw a person walking a dog and few seconds later heard a dog bark you would not be surprised since you would identify the likely source of the sound from sensory(visual) memory that had been processed and encoded in short term memory. 8
  • 10. EXPLICIT / DECLARATIVE / RELATIONAL MEMORY Deals with facts and events, available to conscious for declaration. Common examples: 5-minute recalls, asking the patient what they had for breakfast. 1.Semantic memory/ memory for abstract facts: What is the capital of India? 2.Episodic memory/ memory for specific events: What did you have for breakfast? Person is conscious of what they are remembering. Stored in Hippocampus. 10
  • 11. AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL MEMORY Characterized by-  General recall of event.  An interpretation of event.  Recall of few specific details.  A type of episodic memory.  Associated with the active experience of remembering 11 Memories of events and issues that relate to oneself. (Married? Wedding day?).
  • 12. IMPLICIT/PROCEDURAL/SKILLS MEMORY 12 Performance of tasks such as typing , swimming or cutting a loaf of bread. Expressions of prior learning. No active awareness that memory is being searched in undertaking particular skill. Stored in limbic system, amygdala and cerebellum.
  • 13. When memories have been rehearsed in short term memory , they are encoded into long term memory Storage of material in long term memory allows for recall of events from past and for the utilisation of information learnt through the education ststem It is resilient to attack. Hippocampus is particulary imortant in transfer of memory from short term to long term 13 LONG TERM MEMORY
  • 14. Long-term memory Explicit: (declarative)-Person is conscious that they are remembering Episodic: Memory for specific events Semantic: Memory for abstract facts Non declarative (procedural): There is no active awareness that memory is being searched in undertaking the particular skill 14
  • 15. PROCESS OF REMEMBERING HAS FOUR PARTS 15 Registration Retention Retrieval Recall
  • 16. 16 Memory Impairment Amnesia - Loss of memory Paramnesia- Distortions of Memory Hyperamnesia- Exaggerated registration, retention and recall.
  • 17. • Normal memory decay. • interference from related material • Proactive interference (old-new). • Retroactive interference (new-old). AMNESIAS 17 Partial or total inability to recall past experiences and events. May be Organic or psychogenic Due to-
  • 19. PSYCHOGENIC AMNESIAS 19 • Sudden amnesia during periods of extreme trauma. Amnesia for personal identity.(Name, address, history,)and personal events person behaves appropriately to their background and education • May be associated with fugue. • Common in those with h/o head injury in the past. • Ability to perform complex behaviours is maintained. 1. Dissociative/ hysterical amnesia:
  • 20. 20 • Inability to recall specific painful memories. • Due to defense mechanism of repression. • More persistent and circumscribed. • Trigger/ psychotherapeutic intervention makes memory available to consciousness. • Lasts for many years. • There is no loss of personal identity 2. Katathymic amnesia/ motivated forgetting:
  • 21. ORGANIC AMNESIAS 21 • Memory is poor owing to disorders of perception and attention. • There is failure to encode material in long term memory. • Acute head injury there is amnesia –retrograde amnesia , which embraces the events just before the injury anterograde amnesia is amnesia occuring after the injury • Black outs- Anterograde amnesia in alcohol dependent patients.  Indicate reversible brain damage.  Delirium- infection,epilepsy. 1. Acute brain disease:
  • 22. 22 Unable to register new memories Antero grade and retrograde amnesia Antero grade amnesia –inability to learn new memories Retrograde amnesia –inability to recall previously learned material Remote memory: intact  Korsakoff’s syndrome is the amnestic syndome caused by thiamine deficiency Other cause - cerobrovascular disease, multiple sclerosis ,ECT 2. Subacute coarse brain disease:
  • 23. 23 • Amnesia extending over many years. • Memory for recent events is lost before that for remote events. • Ribot’s law of memory regression. 3. Chronic coarse brain disease:
  • 24. OTHER AMNESIA. Anxiety amnesia –occurs when there is anxious preoccupation or poor concentration such as depressive illness or generalised anxiety Depressive pseudo dementia- more severe form of amnesia in depressive disorder Occurs D/t impaired concentration and resolve once underlying disorder is treated. ,
  • 25. PARAMNESIA 25  Occur in normal subjects due to process of normal forgetting.  Emotional problems and organic states. 1. Distortions of recall 2. Distortions of recognition
  • 26. 26 PARAMNESIA DISTORTIONS OF RECALL Retrospective Falsification. False Memory Screen Memory Confabulation Pseudologia Fantastica Munchausen's Syndrome Vorbeireden Cryptamnesia Retrospective Delusion DISTORTIONS OF RECOGNITION Déjà vu Deja entendu. Jamais Vu. Deja Pense.
  • 27. DISTORTIONS OF RECALL 27 • Unintentional distortion occurs when it filtered through a person's current emotional, experiential and cognitive state • The depressed patient describes all past experiences in negative terms due to the impact of his current mood. • So a depressed person will highlight their failures while ignoring and/or forgetting about their successes • retrospective falsification is inversely related to the degree of insight 1. Retrospective falsification:
  • 28. 28 • False memory - Recollection of an event which did not occur but which the individual believes did take place • Source amnesia: Difficulty in remembering the source from which the information was acquired.(from one's own recall or external source) 2. False memory/ Memory distrust syndrome :
  • 29. 29 • Recollection that is partially true and partially false. • Recalls only part of true memory. • Childhood sexual abuse by neighbour, since too painful to recall it to be done by brother. 3. Screen memory:
  • 30. 30 • Falsification of memory occurring in clear consciousness in association with organic pathology. • Filling in of gaps in memory by imagined or untrue experiences • 2 Broad patterns- Embarassed type -more common- fill in gaps of memory as a result of awareness of deficit. • Fantastic type- lacunae are filled in by details, exceeding the need of memory. 4. Confabulation:
  • 31. 31 • Fluent plausible lying/ pathological lying confabulation that occurs in those without organic brain pathology such as personality disorder of anti social and hysterical type. • Typically the subject describes various major events and traumas or makes grandiose claims, and these often present at a time of personal crisis, such as facing legal proceedings • These individuals Admit their lying. 5. Pseudologia fantastica:
  • 32. 32 •Variant of pathological lying in which the individual presents to the hospital with bogus medical illness complex medical histories and often multiple surgical scars •Munchausen’s by proxy -A proxy form of this condition has been described in which the individual, usually a parent, produces a factitious illness in someone else, generally their child. This may lead to repeated presentations to hospital over a prolonged period of time, and both diagnosis and management can be very challenging in these cases. 6. Munchausen’s syndrome:
  • 33. 33 • Vorbeireden ( approximate answering) Patient understands the question but deliberately avoids the correct answer • Clouding of consciousness with disorientation, Auditory and visual hallucination ,conversion symptoms and recent head injury • Ganser observed this amnesia in four criminals to avoid court appearance 7. Vorbeireden or approximate answers:
  • 34. 34 approximate answers described by Ganser. • Clouding of consciousness with disorientation,pseudohallucination • Recent history of head injury, typhus or severe emotional stress. • Amnesia for the period during which the above symptoms were manifest.
  • 35. 35 • Experience of not remembering that one is remembering. • A person writes a witty passage and does not realize that they are quoting from some passage they have seen elsewhere rather than writing something original. 8. Cryptamnesia:
  • 36. 36 • The psychotic patient backdates his delusions in spite of the clear evidence that the illness is of recent origin • They will say that they have always been persecuted or they have always been evil. 9. Retrospective delusions:
  • 37. DISTORTIONS OF RECOGNITION Déjà vu: Problem with familiarity of places and events. Feeling of having experienced current event in past, although it has no basis in fact. Deja entendu: Feeling of auditory recognition. Jamais vu: Event has been experienced before but is not presently associated with appropriate feelings of familiarity. Deja pense: New thought recognized as having previously occurred. 37
  • 39. • Exaggerated registration, retention and recall. Flashbulb memories: are those memories that are associated with intense emotion, they are unusually vivid, detailed and long lasting.For ex.the 9/11 terrorist bombings 39 HYPERAMNESIA
  • 40. 40 •Flash backs: Sudden intrusive memories that are associated with cognitive and emotional experiences of traumatic events like such an accident • One of characteristic symptom of PTSD. Also associated with substance misuse disorders , emotional events. • Flashbacks involving hallucinogenic experiences can occur in association with hallucinogenic drugs and possibly cannabis use after the short-term effects have worn off • Eidetic images: Visual memories of almost hallucinatory vividness. due to substance misuse, especially hallucinogenic agents.