UGA Logo Office of Public Affairs Public Affairs 2
News Service UGA home link
Search link
Contact Us
UGA NEWS Service
News Release
Last Updated: Sep 23rd, 2009 - 16:32:23
Search




For releases prior to July 2003

UGA News Bureau

Top News Storiesmore...
In the Newsmore...
Master Calendarmore...
Advisoriesmore...
All News Releasesmore...
Columnsmore...
Faculty/staff newspaper
News from Schools & Colleges more...
Media Resources
Campaign and election experts more...
Back to School Features more...
Media contacts more...
Experts directory more...
e-Newsmore...
Put UGA's top stories on your sitemore...
Special Reports

Latest budget information

Arch News - August 7, 2009
Response to Board of Regents request for UGA budget plan

Arch News - July 22, 2009
Budget update

University of Georgia President Michael F. Adams gave a budget update to the UGA community during the April 23 meeting of the University Council at the Georgia Center for Continuing Education Conference Center and Hotel. A video presentation and talking points are available for viewing.

Arch News - April 22, 2009
Upcoming budget presentation

Arch News - April 10, 2009
Status of the FY10 state budget

UGA president provides budget update
University of Georgia President Michael F. Adams gave members of University Council an update on UGA’s budget Thursday, Dec. 4 in wake of recent actions by the University System of Georgia Board of Regents to help meet an anticipated directive from state officials to increase the budget cut to 8 percent from the current 6 percent.
View December 4, 2008 Budget Update

Public forum on University Budget
On Wednesday, Sept. 17, President Michael F. Adams and other senior university officials delivered a presentation about the impact of current economic challenges and responded to questions from the audience. Links to archived video of the first budget forum on Sept. 5.
View September 1, 2008 forum online →
View September 5, 2008 forum online →
President's talking points [pdf] →
UGA Fiscal Update [ppt] →

Information on the April 25 off-campus shooting more...
Information on the national outbreak of H1N1 virus (commonly known as swine flu) more...
President's speeches more...
UGA's Master Plan more...
The UGA Century more...
40th Anniversary of
UGA's Desegregation more...
UGA Responds: 9/11 more...
Featured Research more...
Commencement Addresses more...
ARCHE Reports more...
University System of Georgia
news publications
Legislative Updates more...
The System Supplement more...
Value-Added USG Serves Georgiamore...
A Worthy Investmentmore...
UGA Open Records
Request procedure, form and FAQsmore...
The Office of the Attorney General of Georgiamore...
The Georgia Secretary of State Open Recordsmore...
The Georgia First Amendment Foundationmore...
Contact UGA Open Records Managermore...

New animal study may help in understanding how such diseases as Alzheimer's rob sufferers of episodic memory
Writer: Philip Lee Williams, 706/542-8501, phil@franklin.uga.edu
Contact: Jonathon Crystal, 706/542-6698, jcrystal@uga.edu
May 20, 2009, 09:03

Email this article
Printer friendly page
Athens, Ga. – Memory loss is love’s great thief. Those who suffer aren’t just the ones who can’t remember. Family, friends and loved ones agonize over how to react when the disorder begins its often inexorable progress.

Now, just-published research from scientists at the University of Georgia is offering new insights into how one kind of memory works. The study, published this week in the online edition of The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, shows that laboratory rats have “episodic-like memory” and could open novel ways to study life-robbing loss of memory in humans.

“This research shows that rats remember the time at which they encounter a distinctive event, in addition to what the event was and where it happened,” said Jonathon Crystal, an associate professor in the department of psychology’s Neuroscience and Behavior Program in UGA’s Franklin College of Art and Sciences. “These experiments provide insight into the memory system that retains the time of occurrence of earlier events.”

Co-author of the paper was Wenyi Zhou, a doctoral student in Crystal’s laboratory. The work was supported by a grant from the National Institute of Mental Health.

Memory loss in humans can be caused by an array of diseases, such as Parkinson’s and Huntington’s, but the great destroyer of memory is Alzheimer’s disease, which is progressive and, at least for the present, irreversible. Drugs used to treat cancer can cause memory loss, as can certain forms of mental illness or traumatic brain injuries. Memory loss often ends an independent life for those who suffer it, and researchers around the world are looking for ways to slow or stop damage to memory, especially through pharmaceuticals.

Still, much remains unknown about the disorder, and so having an effective animal model of memory will be critical to understanding how and why memory fades.

The paper deals with one specific kind: “episodic memory.” In this kind of remembering, unique past events are recalled and can be placed in time and at a specific location. For years, many scientists believed that only humans have episodic memory, and that supposition may have limited approaches to studying the problem.

Crystal argues in this PNAS paper, however, that behavioral experiments can show that rats do have such memory. If confirmed, the implications are considerable because episodic memory would give researchers a way to study this type of memory in a nonhuman model.

“It has been argued that retrieval of episodic memories is analogous to traveling back in time,” he said. “Recent studies with nonhuman animals suggest that animals remember specific episodes from their past, but there has been controversy over whether episodic-like memory in rodents is the same as it is in humans.”

The experiment reported this week involved setting up a situation in which rats were “asked” to remember the time of day at which they encountered a distinctive event, in addition to what occurred and where it happened. The event was the feeding of chocolate-flavored pellets—chocolate being a flavor that rats, like humans, crave.

The rats were fed in the morning and afternoon on separate days, but chocolate was available at only one time and place. Rats adjusted their revisits to the chocolate location by using the time of day rather than how long ago the event occurred.

“Our results suggest that at the time of memory assessment, rats remember when a recent episode occurred, similar to human episodic memory,” said Crystal.

Zhou agrees.

“As a memory system that is late to develop in childhood and is the first to decline in old age, episodic memory has attracted intensive attention in the scientific community recently,” she said. “Because there are many limitations in human studies, I think the development of a rodent model of episodic memory will provide an invaluable tool for understanding the underlying mechanisms. It will also bridge the gap between studies of memory in humans and animals.”

The problem at hand for those studying human memory loss isn’t as simple as “Where did I leave my car keys?” The question at hand is more like, “What happened to me yesterday?” Until researchers understand memory more—through studies such as this one—memory loss will remain the great thief of human love.

##

Note to editors: A copy of the paper is available from Crystal at the e-mail address above.



Top of Page


Today is Wednesday, November 25, 2009 07:40 AM EST

UGA Today is produced by the UGA News Service, a unit of UGA Public Affairs.
Hodgson Oil Building, Suite 200N
286 Oconee Street
Athens, GA  30602-1999
Phone 706/542-8083 • Fax 706/542-3939
Questions, comments and suggestions should be directed to news@uga.edu


UGA Home | External Affairs | Columns | Georgia Magazine
Publications / UGA Identity Materials | Broadcast and Video | Photographic Services
UGA Athletics | UGA Events | Visitors Center | Admissions | Directories | Search