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Copyright West University of Timisoara, Department of Biology and Chemistry 2015

Abstract

The hippocampus and the amygdala are structures of mammalian brain both involved in memorizing. However, they are responsible for different types of memory: the hippocampus is involved in creating and storing declarative engrams and the amygdala is engaged in some of non-declarative learning. During memorization, changes of synapses appear and it is believed that they encode information. Long-Term Potentiation (LTP) and Long-Term Depression (LTD) are two processes which provide to these changes which are called synaptic plasticity. LTP strengthens connections between neurons and because of that it is traditionally linked with learning. LTD as an opposite state is usually treated as forgetting. However, there are some evidences that it is true only for few types of non-declarative engrams. More sophisticated learning (like declarative learning) requires cooperation of these processes. Review is focused on functions and detailed signaling pathways of processes of synaptic plasticity.

Details

Title
MOLECULAR BASIS OF LEARNING IN THE HIPPOCAMPUS AND THE AMYGDALA
Author
Bijoch, Lukasz
Pages
179-188
Publication year
2015
Publication date
2015
Publisher
West University of Timisoara, Department of Biology and Chemistry
ISSN
15823830
e-ISSN
22857044
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1751976474
Copyright
Copyright West University of Timisoara, Department of Biology and Chemistry 2015