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INTRODUCTION |
TYPES OF MEMORY |
MEMORY PROCESSES |
MEMORY DISORDERS |
MEMORY & THE BRAIN |
SOURCES & REFERENCES |
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![]() SCHIZOPHRENIA
Both schizophrenia and multiple personality disorder chiefly affect biographical or episodic memory, leaving semantic and procedural memory largely accessible (to all of the person’s identities). The disorder is believed to develop as a defence mechanism against childhood deprivation or abuse or some other kind of psychic trauma. Elderly schizophrenia patients often also suffer from Alzheimer’s disease, or some other form of dementia, in varying levels of severity. Schizophrenics often have difficulty encoding, storing and recalling words, although recent advances in the understanding of neuroplasticity have led to some promising new treatments. It has been shown that schizophrenic symptoms can be improved by stimulation, particularly through the regular repetition of some simple (although progressively more challenging) auditory and visual exercises. As brains change physically through neuroplasticity, many of the abnormal patterns in the brain which characterize schizophrenia are removed. In addition, levels of the protein BDNF (brain-derived neurotrophic factor), which is lower than normal in schizophrenics, are also increased to near normal levels. Similar treatments may even be used to prevent the onset of schizophrenia in people exhibiting early warning signs of the disorder. Studies have shown that schizophrenic patients not currently taking related medication have a smaller putamen (part of the striatum that plays a very important role in procedural memory), as well as improper communication from the basal ganglia part of the brain. Although it is thought that functional problems in the striatum of schizophrenic patients are not significant enough to seriously impair procedural memory, the impairment may be significant enough to cause problems in the improvement of performance on a task between practice intervals. Back to Top of Page Home | Contact | Search Introduction | Types of Memory | Memory Processes | Memory Disorders | Memory & the Brain | Sources & References |
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what is memory, what is human memory
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