Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Doktorikraad Umea ülikoolist

Märtsis 2010 kaitses Kristiina Kompus Umea ülikoolis doktoritöö teemal "How the past becomes present: Neural mechanisms governing retrieval from episodic memory".

Remembering previously experienced events can happen as a result of an effortful retrieval attempt. At other occasions, a memory can enter our minds without any apparent effort – or, indeed, intention - to retrieve. Although it has long been appreciated that retrieval from episodic memory is intertwined with cognitive control, the neural mechanisms of memory-control interactions remain unclear. In this thesis I have used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and scalp-recorded event-related potentials (ERP) to study the neural basis of episodic retrieval at varying levels of cognitive control. The dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) has been suggested to support a cognitive control mechanism (context processing) which is relevant during various situations that demand maintenance of current goals and rules. Although increased dlPFC recruitment with increasing context processing demands has been demonstrated during episodic retrieval, there are relatively few studies directly comparing the engagement of dlPFC during episodic retrieval with that during other task domains.

In Study I, context processing demands were amplified in episodic retrieval, auditory attention and emotion regulation tasks. This led to overlapping dlPFC recruitment in the first two domains and a divergent reliance on ventromedial prefrontal cortex in the emotion domain. Thus, when selection between competing representations needs to be carried out in accordance with the currently relevant goals and task rules, the episodic memory system interacts with domain-general cognitive control mechanisms.

Studies II and III explored the reactive nature of retrieval-specific control mechanisms: can we flexibly switch between semantic and episodic retrieval based on the information extracted from a retrieval cue? This was studied using a recognition memory task where the relevant information could with equal probability be supplied by the semantic or the episodic memory system. The fMRI results (Study II) showed that the brain activation during the ‘episodic’ but not the ‘semantic’ trials was expressed in the right prefrontal cortex. As the order of trials was unpredictable, the corresponding changes in brain activation might be evoked by differences in early cue-trace interactions. An event-related potential study (Study III) with the same experimental protocol as in Study II showed that neural processing corresponding to the two trial types diverged as early as in the time window 100-140 ms post-cue onset, thus highlighting the importance of early cuetrace matching in the selection of further retrieval processing.

Study IV explored incidental episodic retrieval. Although this form of retrieval is a common experience in everyday life and a disturbing symptom in some psychiatric conditions, it is not clear how such spontaneous expressions of memory are initiated and to what extent the prefrontal cortex is engaged. The fMRI results showed, consistent with Study I, that dlPFC is specifically associated with the intention to retrieve, independently of success. Retrieval success engaged similar networks for incidentally as well as intentionally retrieved memories, comprising the hippocampus, precuneus, ventrolateral PFC, and the anterior cingulate cortex. Collectively, the fMRI and ERP results indicated that incidental retrieval was initiated by early oldness estimation carried out on the semantic information extracted from the retrieval cues. Taken together, the results of this thesis indicate that episodic retrieval can be initiated via two routes: a bottom-up input rising early during the cue processing, and a top-down input provided by the cognitive control processes mediated by the prefrontal cortex.

Monday, March 22, 2010

Järgmine supervisioon Tartus

Esialgsete plaanide järgi on järgmine supervisioon Tartus praegu kokku lepitud 28.04 kl 15 Lastekliinikus. Täpsem info edaspidi.

Monday, March 15, 2010

supervisioon Tartus 15.03

Teine supervisioon Tartus toimus 15.03. Kohal olid Margus, Liisi, Anneli, Mari-Liis, Kristo ja Helen. Rääkisime ühest kortikobasaalse degeneratsiooniga patsiendist ja Liisi tutvustas selle diagnoosi kognitiivset profiili ka lähemalt.
Järgmine kokkusaamine Tartus on praegu kokku lepitud 28. aprillil kell 15 Lastekliinikus.

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

järgmine Tartu supervisioon

Järgmine supervisioon Tartus toimub 15.03 kell 15:00 Närvikliinikus, Puusepa 8, ruumis H302  
Kohtumiseni! M.E.

supervisioon Tallinnas 03.03.2010

supervisioon 03.03.2010 toimus - rääkisime B12 defitsiidist, arutasime Kai esitatud ettekannet ja juhtumit, taastusravi arengukava ja teisi olulisi kaasaegse neuropsühholoogiaga seonduvaid küsimusi. kohal olid Liina, Kai, Evelin, Helen, Sirje, Maris, Piret, Heivi ja Natalja. uus kogunemine toimub aprilli alguses