Anterior and lateral thalamic lesions in object-odour paired associate learning

Diencephalic amnesia is thought to be the result of damage to a single thalamic structure that is responsible for the memory impairment. However, an alternative view is that different thalamic structures contribute to the memory impairment in subtly different ways. Paired-associate learning is one...

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Main Author: Bell, Rati
Language:en
Published: University of Canterbury. Biological Sciences 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10092/1450
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spelling ndltd-canterbury.ac.nz-oai-ir.canterbury.ac.nz-10092-14502015-03-30T15:30:02ZAnterior and lateral thalamic lesions in object-odour paired associate learningBell, RatiDiencephalic amnesiamemorythalamusanterior thalamic nucleilateral thalamic nucleipaired-associate learningDiencephalic amnesia is thought to be the result of damage to a single thalamic structure that is responsible for the memory impairment. However, an alternative view is that different thalamic structures contribute to the memory impairment in subtly different ways. Paired-associate learning is one important measure of learning and memory that is highly sensitive to disruption in people with amnesia or dementia. The current study will investigate the influence of lesions to two thalamic subregions, the anterior thalamic nuclei (AT) and the lateral thalamic nuclei (LT) in an object-odour paired associate learning task. Each of these subregions has been suggested by the literature as critical for amnesia after thalamus injury. The current study does not involve a place/ space component. Both AT and LT lesions caused impairments in the object-odour paired associate task, but not in the simple discrimination tasks. The results of this study provide new evidence to suggest that the anterior thalamic region may be responsible for more than spatial memory processing. This result is inconsistent with those of Aggleton & Brown (1999) that consider the AT to be part of an 'extended hippocampal system'. The deficits observed from LT lesions in this study provide new insight into the lateral thalamic region's role in pattern processing.University of Canterbury. Biological Sciences2008-09-08T00:04:01Z2008-09-08T00:04:01Z2007Electronic thesis or dissertationTexthttp://hdl.handle.net/10092/1450enNZCUCopyright Rati Bellhttp://library.canterbury.ac.nz/thesis/etheses_copyright.shtml
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Diencephalic amnesia
memory
thalamus
anterior thalamic nuclei
lateral thalamic nuclei
paired-associate learning
spellingShingle Diencephalic amnesia
memory
thalamus
anterior thalamic nuclei
lateral thalamic nuclei
paired-associate learning
Bell, Rati
Anterior and lateral thalamic lesions in object-odour paired associate learning
description Diencephalic amnesia is thought to be the result of damage to a single thalamic structure that is responsible for the memory impairment. However, an alternative view is that different thalamic structures contribute to the memory impairment in subtly different ways. Paired-associate learning is one important measure of learning and memory that is highly sensitive to disruption in people with amnesia or dementia. The current study will investigate the influence of lesions to two thalamic subregions, the anterior thalamic nuclei (AT) and the lateral thalamic nuclei (LT) in an object-odour paired associate learning task. Each of these subregions has been suggested by the literature as critical for amnesia after thalamus injury. The current study does not involve a place/ space component. Both AT and LT lesions caused impairments in the object-odour paired associate task, but not in the simple discrimination tasks. The results of this study provide new evidence to suggest that the anterior thalamic region may be responsible for more than spatial memory processing. This result is inconsistent with those of Aggleton & Brown (1999) that consider the AT to be part of an 'extended hippocampal system'. The deficits observed from LT lesions in this study provide new insight into the lateral thalamic region's role in pattern processing.
author Bell, Rati
author_facet Bell, Rati
author_sort Bell, Rati
title Anterior and lateral thalamic lesions in object-odour paired associate learning
title_short Anterior and lateral thalamic lesions in object-odour paired associate learning
title_full Anterior and lateral thalamic lesions in object-odour paired associate learning
title_fullStr Anterior and lateral thalamic lesions in object-odour paired associate learning
title_full_unstemmed Anterior and lateral thalamic lesions in object-odour paired associate learning
title_sort anterior and lateral thalamic lesions in object-odour paired associate learning
publisher University of Canterbury. Biological Sciences
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/10092/1450
work_keys_str_mv AT bellrati anteriorandlateralthalamiclesionsinobjectodourpairedassociatelearning
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