What is Memory Loss?
 

             
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    What is Memory Loss?

Memory loss, also known as amnesia, is a state of unusual forgetfulness. It can be caused by brain damage resulting from diseases, such as Alzheimer’s and Huntington’s. It may result from an injury or severe emotional trauma. The normal aging process may lead to slower recall of information and greater difficulty in learning new material. In itself, however, aging will not dramatically affect one’s memory.

Memory involves several different functions of the brain. Most students of the brain divide memory into two kinds, declarative and procedural. The procedural involves skills and habits. The declarative, on the other hand, involves storing facts. Memory processes can be itemized according to the time they take: very short-term memory, which lasts about 100 milliseconds; short-term memory, which is of a few seconds’ duration; working memory, which stores recent experiences; and long-term memory, which houses verbal material that has been rehearsed and motor skills that have been practiced.

One possible explanation of long-term memory is that it starts with activity in the front part of the brain. The information chosen for long-term memory passes as an electrical impulse to a part of the brain known as the hippocampus. Here a process called long-term potentiation enhances the neurons’ ability to pass messages.

A different theory of memory stems from the idea that brain waves play a key part. Its proponents believe that regular oscillations of the brain’s electrical activity, rather like the beat of a drum, help bind memories together and control the moment at which different brain cells are activated.

Researchers believe that the brain stores different aspects of memories in different places, each concept being linked to the area of the brain that specializes in perceiving it. Some parts of the brain certainly contribute to memory. The amygdala, a small almond-size clump of nerve cells close to the brain stem, processes memories of fear. The basal ganglia region is focused on habits and physical skills, and the cerebellum, at the base of the brain, concentrates on conditioned learning and reflexes. Here, it is believed, we store the skills of balance—for example, those we need to ride a bicycle.

The following types of amnesia have been recognized:

  1. Transient global amnesia, which is a temporary complete loss of memory

  2. Anterograde amnesia, which refers to the inability to recall recent events in the aftermath of a trauma

  3. Retrograde amnesia, which is the inability to remember events preceding a trauma. Recall of events after the trauma, however, is unaffected.

Symptoms of Memory Loss
 
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