Memory Podcast
Science & Medicine
This page contains slides and podcasts that are based on lectures in my courses on Memory. They are provided as study aids for my students but anyone is welcome to listen to them. (Author: Julian Keith)
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Author | Julian Keith |
Feed | http://web.mac.com/memoryguy/Julian_Keith/Memory_Podcast/rss.xml |
Site | http://web.mac.com/memoryguy/Julian_Keith/Memory_Podcast/Memory_Podcast.html |
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Recent episodes from Memory Podcast
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Published: Apr 7, 08Consectetuer arcu ipsum ornare pellentesque vehicula, in vehicula diam, ornare magna erat felis wisi a risus. Justo fermentum id. Malesuada eleifend, tortor molestie, a fusce a vel et. Mauris at suspendisse, neque aliquam faucibus adipiscing, vivamus in. Wisi mattis leo suscipit nec amet, nisl fermentum tempor ac a, augue in eleifend in venenatis, cras sit id in vestibulum felis in, sed ligula. In sodales suspendisse mauris quam etiam erat, quia tellus convallis eros rhoncus diam orci, por
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Published: Apr 7, 08A brief summary of research on LTP and its possible role in memory.
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Published: Apr 7, 08A brief summary of research on LTP and its possible role in memory.
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Published: Feb 25, 08This lecture is about the activity of neurons in the hippocampus during memory acquisition and retrieval.
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Published: Feb 18, 08This lecture examined mechanistic models of how the hippocampus contributes to memory
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Published: Feb 11, 08This lecture reviewed some basic concepts related to the neural mechanisms involved in classical conditioning.
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Published: Feb 4, 08In this class we examined the systems that enable category learning. The focus was on work done by Maddox and Ashby reviewed in their 2004 article.
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Published: Jan 28, 08This podcast is based on a brief lecture on autobiographical memory. We reviewed a study by Pascale Piolino et al. (2007) that examined retrograde amnesia for autobiographical information in Alzheimer’s, Semantic, and Fronto-temporal dementia patients.
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Published: Jan 28, 08This podcast is based on multiple memory systems, with an emphasis on declarative memory a la Squire and Zola.
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