"Spatial memory"
In cognitive psychology and neuroscience, spatial
memory is the part of memory
responsible for recording information about one's environment and spatial
orientation. For example, a person's spatial memory is required in order to
navigate around a familiar city, just as a rat's spatial memory is needed to
learn the location of food at the end of a maze.
Spatial memory has representations within working, short-term memory and long-term memory. Research indicates that there are specific
areas of the brain associated with spatial memory. Many methods are used for
measuring spatial memory in children, adults, and animals.
Short-term spatial memory:
Short-term
memory (STM) can be
described as a system allowing one to temporarily store and manage information
that is necessary to complete complex tasks.[1]Tasks which
employ short-term memory include learning, reasoning, and
comprehension.[1]This allows one to remember where an object is in
relation to another object;[1] for instance, allowing someone to navigate through a familiar city. Spatial memories are said to form after a
person has already gathered and processed sensory information about her or his environment.
Long-term spatial memory:
Boundaries are among the most
basic and endemic qualities in the world around us. These boundaries are
nothing more than axial lines which are a feature that people are biased
towards when relating to space; for example one axial line determinant is gravity
(McNamara & Shelton, 2001; Kim & Penn, 2004). Axial lines aid everyone
in apportioning our perceptions into regions. This parceled world idea is
further supported items by the finding that items that get recalled together
are more likely than not to also be clustered within the same region of one's
larger cognitive map.[9] Clustering shows that people tend
to chunk information together according to smaller layouts within a larger
cognitive map.
Lack of experience in a locale,
or simply sheer size, can disorient one's mental layout, especially in a large
and unfamiliar place with lots of overwhelming stimuli. In these environments
people are still able to orient themselves, and even find their way around
using landmarks. This ability to "prioritize objects and
regions in complex scenes for selection (and) recognition" was labeled by
Chun and Jiang in 1998. Landmarks give people guidance by activating "learned
associations between the global context and target locations."[8] Mallot and Gillner (2000) showed
that subjects learned an association between a specific landmark and the
direction of a turn, thereby furthering the relationship between associations
and landmarks.[11] Shelton and McNamara (2001) succinctly
summed up why landmarks, as markers, are so helpful: "location...cannot be
described without making reference to the orientation of the observer."
It is fairly clear that people
use both the layout of a particular space, as well as the presence of orienting
landmarks in order to navigate. Yet, psychologists have yet to explain whether
layout affects landmarks or if landmarks determine the boundaries of a layout.
Thus, this concept suffers from a chicken and the egg paradox. In fact,
McNamara has found that subjects use "clusters of landmarks as intrinsic
frames of reference," which only confuses the issue further.[10]
People perceive objects in their
environment relative to other objects in that same environment. In other words,
landmarks and layout are complimentary systems for spatial recall.
Hippocampus:
The hippocampus provides animals with a spatial
map of their environment.[22] It stores information regarding
non-egocentric space (egocentric means in reference to one's body position in
space) and therefore supports viewpoint independence in spatial memory.[23] This means that it allows for
viewpoint manipulation from memory. It is however, important for long-term
spatial memory of allocentric space (reference to external cues in space).[24] Maintenance and retrieval of
memories are thus relational or context dependent.[25] The hippocampus makes use of
reference and working memory and has the important role of processing
information about spatial locations.[26]
Blocking plasticity in this region results in
problems in goal-directed navigation and impairs the ability to remember
precise locations.[27]Amnesic patients with damage to
the hippocampus cannot learn or remember spatial layouts and patients having
undergone hippocampal removal are severely impaired in spatial navigation.[23][28] Monkeys with lesions to this area
cannot learn object-place associations and rats also display spatial deficits
by not reacting to spatial change.[23][29] In addition, rats with
hippocampal lesions were shown to have temporally ungraded (time-independent) retrograde amnesia that is resistant to recognition of a learned platform task only
when the entire hippocampus is lesioned, but not when it is partially lesioned.[30] Deficits in spatial memory are
also found in spatial discrimination tasks.[28]
Brain
slice showing areas CA1 and CA3 in the hippocampus
Large differences in spatial
impairment are found among the dorsal and ventral hippocampus. Lesions to the ventral hippocampus have no effect
on spatial memory, while the dorsal hippocampus is required for retrieval,
processing short-term memory and transferring memory from the short term to
longer delay periods.[31][32][33] Infusion of amphetamine into the dorsal hippocampus has
also been shown to enhance memory for spatial locations learned previously.[34] These findings indicate that
there is a functional dissociation between the dorsal and ventral hippocampus.
The hippocampus is known to
contain two separate memory circuits. One circuit is used for
recollection-based place recognition memory and includes the entorhinal-CA1 system,[36] while the other system,
consisting of the hippocampus trisynaptic loop (entohinal-dentate-CA3-CA1) is used for place recall memory[37] and facilitation of plasticity at
the entorhinal-dentate synapse in mice is sufficient to enhance place recall.[38]
References:
1. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e Johnson, E.; Adamo-Villani, N. (2010). "A Study of the
Effects of Immersion on Short-term Spatial Memory". Engineering and Technology. 71: 582–587.
2. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f g h i j k l Ang, S. Y.; Lee, K. (2008). "Central executive involvement
in children's spatial memory". Memory. 16 (8): 918–933. doi:10.1080/09658210802365347. PMID 18802804.
3. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f Jones, D.; Farrand, P.; Stuart, G.; Morris, N.; et al. (1995).
"Functional equivalence of verbal and spatial information in serial
short-term memory". Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and
Cognition. 21 (4): 1008–1018. doi:10.1037/0278-7393.21.4.1008.
4. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e Della Sala, S.; Gray, C.; Baddeley, A.; Allamano, N.; Wilson,
L.; et al. (1999). "Pattern span: a tool for unwelding visuo-spatial
memory". Neuropsychologia. 37 (10): 1189–1199. doi:10.1016/S0028-3932(98)00159-6. PMID 10509840.
5. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e Mammarella, I. C.; Pazzaglia, F.; Cornoldi, C.; et al. (2008).
"Evidence for different components in children's visuospatial working
memory". British Journal of Developmental Psychology. 26 (3): 337–355. doi:10.1348/026151007X236061.
It is really interesting. The effort provided to such work is obvious. You are such a hard worker Dima. Keep it up and for more successful projects.
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DeleteThis topic helped me more to understand the spatial memory problems in learning difficulties students. Thank u Dima. Good work!!!
ReplyDeleteI'm glad to hear that. Thanks for the kind words..
DeleteLoved all that you shared and also your pic :)!Thank you Dima for sharing with us this information about spatial memory that will help us in a life time to solve problems in learning difficulties with students,you're doing a great job,keep it up
ReplyDeleteHow sweet!!
ReplyDeleteThanks dear for the motivating words..
That's a great topic. It is very interesting to get to know how the spatial memory affects the student learning, and how each one of us have its own way to control our memories. Thank you for the information Dima.
ReplyDeleteA lot of rich information and especially the way used to control our memory;
ReplyDeleteGreat JOb keep going !
This topic is not only important for biologists but also for us as educators and teachers because student's spatial memory capacity plays in his or her ability to succeed in school. As teachers, we should work on improving spatial memory.
ReplyDeleteThis topic is not only important for biologists but also for us as educators and teachers because student's spatial memory capacity plays in his or her ability to succeed in school. As teachers, we should work on improving spatial memory.
ReplyDelete