Jump to content

Associative memory

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 159.226.118.102 (talk) at 08:55, 25 April 2014 (References). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Associative memory may refer to:

Associative memory

In the memory of associating two or more items, multiple cortical areas may be involved. For example, when the human memorizes the image of a person and the sound of his or her name, the cortices of two sensory modalities, i.e., visual and auditory cortices, are needed to fulfill their association. In this regard, associative memory is cross-modal memory in nature. A testable hypothesis is that these two cortical areas are connected after the associative learning of two events as well as that each of two cortices is able to encode these two input signals.

To address cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying associative memory, we need an animal model in that one signal induces the recall of its associative signal, or turned around after associative learning. A current report indicates that co-activation of the barrel and piriform cortices leads to whisker-induced olfactory responses and odorant-induced whisker motion. The neurons in these two cortical areas are able to encode whisker and odor signals with different patterns. Moreover, these two cortical areas are connected after associative learning. Therefore, a co-activation of two cortical areas leads to cross-modal memory for in information storage and distinguishable retrieval. Cite error: The <ref> tag has too many names (see the help page)..

References

Template:Reflists