Jawabri Khalid H., Cascella Marco
Najah university // Tawam hospital
Istituto Nazionale Tumori - IRCCS - Fondazione Pascale, Via Mariano Semmola 80100, Napoli. Italy
Memory is the capability of the brain to encode, store, and retrieve information or data when they are needed. Without memory, it is impossible to perform daily activities or form relationships or learn and progress in our life. That is, memory represents our identity. According to the multistore model of memory (also known as the modal model), proposed by Atkinson and Shiffrin in 1968, memory consists of three stores: a sensory register, short-term memory (STM), and long-term memory (LTM). STM is the capacity to store and manipulate information for a short time, while the LTM relates to storing the information for an extended period. STM, also referred to as short-term storage or primary or active memory, indicates different systems of memory involved in the retention of pieces of information (memory chunks) for a relatively short time (usually up to 30 seconds). On the contrary, LTM may hold an indefinite amount of information for an indefinite time. Based on cognitive psychology studies, since the late sixties of the last century, researchers proposed to divide LTM into two major two subsets of LTM, e and . The explicit memory is also termed as declarative memory as it can be expressed voluntarily, through language and other communication manners. In 1972, the Estonian scientist Endel Tulving suggested the distinction between two types of explicit memory, episodic and semantic memory and illustrated the principles of these memory systems in a book entitled 'Organization of memory' (New York, Academic Press, 1972). Although over the years Tulving modified the construct of semantic and episodic memory, this nosographic approach for memory taxonomy remains a key concept in contemporary cognitive neuroscience. The semantic memory represents the conscious and intentional memory of concepts and meanings, whereas the episodic memory is the conscious recollection of an episode, of the sequence of events that characterized it, and of its space-time location. In other words, the explicit memory concerns itself with the ability to consciously remember the general concepts, ideas, and events that occurred through the person's life. Within explicit memory, episodic memory has an autobiographical reference referring to personally experienced events (context-sensitivity), whereas semantic is detached from the autobiographical reference and cannot be defined in terms of its context-sensitivity. Of note, both episodic and semantic memory can be accessed unintentionally and a strict distinction between the two explicit memory systems cannot be made. Probably, the two forms of memory are highly interactive and share functional properties and neural bases. On the other hand, implicit memory does not require conscious intervention to be retrieved. That is, its recovery is not in the form of memories, but through actions or automatisms, "knowing how." It represents, in turn, our abilities (e.g., swimming, cycling, driving the car) and is therefore referred to as procedural memory. By summarizing LTM can be divided into two subsets: Explicit (or declarative) memory: Episodic memory. Semantic memory. Implicit (or procedural) memory. Although the modal model represents an excellent basis for understanding the modalities of memory, it seems to operate an excessive simplification of matter and has been criticized for being a passive and linear model. Based on a wide range of studies conducted on the subject, several alternative memory models have been proposed. Most likely, a model that can explain memory functioning in detail has yet to be proposed. Therefore, it is reasonable to believe that the various models and theories should be integrated. In this context, the Working Model of Memory proposed by Baddeley and Hitch, in 1974, offers an explanation of how STM works. STM, indeed, is more than just one simple unitary store and comprises different components such as the central executive, and the visuospatial components. In this complex scenario, working memory (WM) represents the capacity to temporarily store and manipulate data in the service of ongoing tasks through a multicomponent system. That is, WK represents an information processing system to allow the storage of information into the LTM sets by way of STM.
记忆是大脑在需要时对信息或数据进行编码、存储和检索的能力。没有记忆,就无法进行日常活动、建立人际关系或在生活中学习和进步。也就是说,记忆代表了我们的身份。根据1968年阿特金森和希夫林提出的记忆多存储模型(也称为模态模型),记忆由三个存储部分组成:感觉登记器、短期记忆(STM)和长期记忆(LTM)。STM是在短时间内存储和处理信息的能力,而LTM则涉及长时间存储信息。STM也被称为短期存储或初级或主动记忆,它表示在相对较短的时间(通常最多30秒)内保留信息片段(记忆组块)所涉及的不同记忆系统。相反,LTM可以在无限的时间内保存无限量的信息。基于认知心理学研究,自上世纪六十年代末以来,研究人员提议将LTM分为两个主要的子集,即外显记忆和内隐记忆。外显记忆也被称为陈述性记忆,因为它可以通过语言和其他交流方式自愿表达。1972年,爱沙尼亚科学家恩德尔·图尔文提出了两种外显记忆的区别,即情景记忆和语义记忆,并在一本名为《记忆的组织》(纽约,学术出版社,1972年)的书中阐述了这些记忆系统的原理。尽管多年来图尔文修改了语义记忆和情景记忆的结构,但这种记忆分类的疾病分类学方法仍然是当代认知神经科学中的一个关键概念。语义记忆代表了对概念和意义的有意识和有意的记忆,而情景记忆是对一个事件、其特征的事件序列以及其时空位置的有意识回忆。换句话说,外显记忆关注的是有意识地记住个人生活中发生的一般概念、想法和事件的能力。在外显记忆中,情景记忆具有自传体参考,指的是个人经历的事件(情境敏感性),而语义记忆则与自传体参考无关,不能根据其情境敏感性来定义。值得注意的是,情景记忆和语义记忆都可以无意地被访问,并且无法对外显记忆的这两个系统进行严格区分。可能,这两种记忆形式具有高度的交互性,并共享功能特性和神经基础。另一方面,内隐记忆的检索不需要有意识的干预。也就是说,它的恢复不是以记忆的形式,而是通过行动或自动行为,即“知道如何做”。它反过来代表了我们的能力(如游泳、骑自行车、开车),因此被称为程序性记忆。综上所述,LTM可以分为两个子集:外显(或陈述性)记忆:情景记忆。语义记忆。内隐(或程序性)记忆。尽管模态模型是理解记忆模式的一个很好的基础,但它似乎对问题进行了过度简化,并因是一个被动和线性的模型而受到批评。基于对该主题进行的广泛研究,已经提出了几种替代记忆模型。很可能,一个能够详细解释记忆功能的模型尚未被提出。因此,有理由相信各种模型和理论应该被整合。在这种背景下,1974年巴德利和希奇提出的工作记忆模型解释了STM是如何工作的。事实上,STM不仅仅是一个简单的单一存储单元,它由不同的组件组成,如中央执行系统和视觉空间组件。在这个复杂的场景中,工作记忆(WM)代表了通过一个多组件系统临时存储和处理数据以服务于正在进行的任务的能力。也就是说,WM代表了一个信息处理系统,通过STM将信息存储到LTM集合中。