| July
27, 2005
Habit Leads To Learning, New VA/UCSD Study Shows
By Leslie Franz
Humans have a “robust”
capacity to learn and retain new information unconsciously,
retaining so-called habit memory even when conscious or declarative
learning is absent, memory experts at the University of California,
San Diego School of Medicine and the San Diego Veterans Affairs
Health System report in the July 28, 2005 issue of Nature.
“We know there
is habit learning and have studied it extensively in animal
models, but we don’t understand the process as clearly
in humans because our declarative memory is so dominant,”
said Larry Squire, professor of neurosciences, psychiatry and
psychology at the VAMC and UCSD.
Declarative memory
is based on active learning and memorization, and is dependent
on a region of the brain in the temporal lobe that includes
the hippocampus. When the hippocampus and related structures
are destroyed, the human patient loses the ability to learn
new memories and to access recent memories.
Habit learning occurs
when information is stored unconsciously, through repetition
and trial-and-error learning. These memories are believed to
be retained in a different region of the brain, called the basal
ganglia. In monkeys with lesions in the hippocampus, it had
been shown that in contrast to humans with similar hippocampal
lesions due to injury or disease who have difficulty learning
certain tasks over a certain time period, the monkeys can learn
the tasks at a normal rate, apparently as habits.
“We have speculated
that humans might have the same capacity to acquire habit memory,
but that this capability is ordinarily obscured by our excellent
capacity to learn by conscious memorization,” said Squire.
In the study reported
in Nature, two human volunteers with amnesia, called EP and
GP, participated in a series of simple object discrimination
tasks. Both individuals have severe memory impairment, due to
temporal lobe damage caused by herpes simplex encephalitis.
The volunteers were
presented with the same series of 8 pairs of miscellaneous objects
and asked to select the correct one of each pair, in several
sessions conducted over several weeks. The word “correct”
was on the bottom of the correct object, and could be read after
the object was picked up and turned over.
At the beginning of
each session, the volunteers had no recollection of having performed
the task previously, and even after several sessions they could
not explain what they were being asked to do or why. But, after
several sessions of repeating the exercise with the same pairs
of objects, the volunteers unconsciously selected the correct
item in each pair with increasing accuracy.
The ability to select
the correct object appeared to be automatic. In fact, during
the course of the study as they were able to select the correct
object, the subjects wondered aloud, “How am I doing this?”.
When asked how he knew which object to select, one of the subjects
pointed to his head and replied “It's here, and somehow
or another the hand goes for it.” By the end of the study
they were scoring 95% and 100% in their selection of the correct
item.
“These findings
help explain how patients with profound memory loss can still
do what they do, for example, why the amnesia patient EP can
take a walk around his neighborhood without getting lost,”
said Squire. “Humans clearly can acquire and retain knowledge
through repetition. This also reminds us that we have this habit
learning system that’s working all the time behind the
scenes, independently shaping who we are and how we behave,
in addition to our conscious learning system.”
Co-authors of the study
are Peter J. Bayley, and Jennifer C. Frascino, of the UCSD Department
of Psychiatry. The study was supported by the Medical Research
Service of the Department of Veterans Affairs, the National
Institute of Mental Health and the Metropolitan Life Foundation.
Media Contacts:
Leslie, Franz, UCSD (619)
543-6163
Cindy Butler,
V.A. San Diego Health Care System (858) 552-4373
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