World History: 1500 - 2001

Caro

Saturday, October 25, 2008

One of the best new Radiohead songs for sure. The first video for this song was made in the studio last New Year's Eve. If you like this song as much as I do, you should check it out. Very interesting to watch these guys play.


Forgetting easy when your brain fights itself
Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News - October 23, 2008

Oct. 23--Ever forget to drop off dry cleaning on the way to work? This minor error of memory may be evidence of two competing parts of the brain, one that harbors habits, and another involved in learning.

Driving to work is a habit; going to the dry cleaner is a comparatively novel task.

Dr. Christopher J. Pittenger, assistant professor of psychiatry at Yale, calls this symbolic lapse the "dry cleaning effect."

T h e w h i m s i -- c a l l a b e l e n c o m -- passes two o p p o s i n g brain systems that could lead t o n e w u n d e r -- standing of o b s e s s i v e compulsive disorder, drug addiction, and other disorders.

Pittenger and colleagues have demonstrated how these systems work in a study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Science.

Pittenger, along with Yale researchers Anni S. Lee and Ronald S. Duman showed how mice respond to changes in the murine habit and spatial learning centers in their brains.

The striatum, in the middle of the brain, stores habits and acts like an autopilot. The hippocampus, a smaller structure beneath the striatum, handles new challenges.

"There are two processes to navigate through the world, literally and metaphorically," Pittenger said.

"I'm interested in things that we do automatically," he said. This automatic behavior is reflected in driving to work, versus driving somewhere strange, he said.

"I cannot remember to drop off the dry cleaning. It takes extra effort to get off autopilot," he said.

In this case, "autopilot" is the striatum guiding you to work or home, to the degree that when you arrive, you cannot remember the trip. Other examples ate walking, talking, riding a bicycle, using utensils, and other actions we accomplish without conscious thought.

The hippocampus comes into play when the brain is required to use spatial information in a new way, Pittenger said. Finding your way out of a forest with a compass is a job for the hippocampus.

Both systems function simultaneously.

Pittenger and colleagues presented mice with a pool of water containing a platform. The mice can be trained to find the platform, which becomes a habit encoded in the striatum.

When the striatum was disrupted, the mice lost their ability to quickly find the platform. However, the same mice improved on tasks involving spatial learning.

Conversely, when the hippocampus was disrupted, the mice could not navigate as well, but learned "landmark tasks," like the location of the platform, more quickly.

Pittenger said that obsessive compulsive disorder, some aspects of autism, and substance abuse, could be habit learning gone wrong.

Other problems might result when the striatum and hippocampus diverge. Alzheimer's disease rapidly damages the hippocampus, which is why patients often fall back on ingrained behaviors, he said.

"If the autopilot system is destructive, a novel system must be brought online," he said. For example, OCD is sometimes treated with cognitive behavioral therapy that helps patients recognize and change destructive "autopilot" thoughts.

"If we could understand these systems better, perhaps we could develop new tools to treat negative habits," Pittenger said.

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

This explains why I need Post-It notes to remind me to talk to teachers before or after school.

P.S. Why were some words expanded out? It's kind of distracting to read.

luangrath said...

Reckoner = Awesome

All of 'In Rainbows' = AC 8

How would you rank it, Mr Caro?

Joseph said...

Mr. Caro, for our extra credit can we use one of the members of our group as the person we are shaping? Obviously we wouldn't tell them what they we're doing or make the group posters until after we carried it out. This is what my group is planning so I hope it's acceptable.

Mr. Caro said...

Alexander, I think the text did that due to funky formatting issues as it is copied into the blog.

Narintohn, hmm, I would concur with you rating of a AC-8

Joseph, that is fine but that person would then have to come up with his/her own example.

Joseph said...

Actually nevermind we decided to do it on someone else, Narintohn's brother in fact.

That new blog picture is pretty awesome by the way.

Mr. Caro said...

Thanks Joseph!

luangrath said...

My video taping skills were, let's say, "Cloverfieldish"
Narin was a great subject, by the way.

Mr Caro, do you like Andy Warhol's work?

Mr. Caro said...

Very cool Narintohn! Now, I hope you are OK if I have you fix some steps...

I do like a lot of his stuff. There is a movie that was made about one of his models -- he looks like a real creep in the movie -- called "Factory Girl". It is a good movie. Sad however.

luangrath said...

Wait- what do you mean? Oh, and can't figure out how to get the video onto my computer...great

I haven't seen 'Factory Girl'. Sienna Miller plays Edie Segwick or whatever right?

Mr. Caro said...

Right.

Well if in your shaping and or chaining examples have some issues, you would be encouraged to fix them.

Unknown said...

Mr Caro!
I'm commenting more :)

I liked this article too
because it explains a lot
on why I need reminders about certain things....