Ourvioletdeath - Inner Ramblings Of The Mind

ourvioletdeath - Inner Ramblings of the Mind

More Posts from Ourvioletdeath and Others

6 years ago

Americans be like: My grandpa 😠😠😠 served in the Korean War 😠😠😠 and killed 9 people 😠😠😠 to fund his college degree in clownery 😠😠😠 Respect him or leave the country 😡😡😡🤬🤬🤬

7 years ago
Game Of Beds (via Asillyfrog)
Game Of Beds (via Asillyfrog)

Game of Beds (via asillyfrog)

8 years ago

I'm a fuck up

I might lose the love of my life, just because I was stupid and stuck in my own little world... God, what do I do to fix this? How do I always mess up so badly? I keep hurting her, and she doesn't deserve any of this. I'm a failure of a boyfriend.

6 years ago
Scientist's accidental discovery makes coral grow 40x faster
There might be hope for our oceans, thanks to one clumsy moment in a coral tank.

It typically takes coral 25 to 75 years to reach sexual maturity. With a new coral fragmentation method, it takes just 3.

7 years ago
(Image Caption: Two Aplysia Sensory Neurons With Synaptic Contacts On The Same Motor Neuron In Culture

(Image caption: Two Aplysia sensory neurons with synaptic contacts on the same motor neuron in culture after isolation from the nervous system of Aplysia. The motor neuron has been injected with a fluorescent molecule that blocks the activity of a specific Protein Kinase M molecule. Credit: Schacher Lab/Columbia University Medical Center)

Select Memories Can Be Erased, Leaving Others Intact

Different types of memories stored in the same neuron of the marine snail Aplysia can be selectively erased, according to a new study by researchers at Columbia University Medical Center (CUMC) and McGill University and published in Current Biology.

The findings suggest that it may be possible to develop drugs to delete memories that trigger anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) without affecting other important memories of past events.

During emotional or traumatic events, multiple memories can become encoded, including memories of any incidental information that is present when the event occurs. In the case of a traumatic experience, the incidental, or neutral, information can trigger anxiety attacks long after the event has occurred, say the researchers.

“The example I like to give is, if you are walking in a high-crime area and you take a shortcut through a dark alley and get mugged, and then you happen to see a mailbox nearby, you might get really nervous when you want to mail something later on,” says Samuel Schacher, PhD, a professor of neuroscience in the Department of Psychiatry at CUMC and co-author of the paper. In the example, fear of dark alleys is an associative memory that provides important information—e.g., fear of dark alleys—based on a previous experience. Fear of mailboxes, however, is an incidental, non-associative memory that is not directly related to the traumatic event.

“One focus of our current research is to develop strategies to eliminate problematic non-associative memories that may become stamped on the brain during a traumatic experience without harming associative memories, which can help people make informed decisions in the future—like not taking shortcuts through dark alleys in high-crime areas,” Dr. Schacher adds.

Brains create long-term memories, in part, by increasing the strength of connections between neurons and maintaining those connections over time. Previous research suggested that increases in synaptic strength in creating associative and non-associative memories share common properties. This suggests that selectively eliminating non-associative synaptic memories would be impossible, because for any one neuron, a single mechanism would be responsible for maintaining all forms of synaptic memories.

The new study tested that hypothesis by stimulating two sensory neurons connected to a single motor neuron of the marine snail Aplysia; one sensory neuron was stimulated to induce an associative memory and the other to induce a non-associative memory.

By measuring the strength of each connection, the researchers found that the increase in the strength of each connection produced by the different stimuli was maintained by a different form of a Protein Kinase M (PKM) molecule (PKM Apl III for associative synaptic memory and PKM Apl I for non-associative). They found that each memory could be erased – without affecting the other — by blocking one of the PKM molecules.

In addition, they found that specific synaptic memories may also be erased by blocking the function of distinct variants of other molecules that either help produce PKMs or protect them from breaking down.

The researchers say that their results could be useful in understanding human memory because vertebrates have similar versions of the Aplysia PKM proteins that participate in the formation of long-term memories. In addition, the PKM-protecting protein KIBRA is expressed in humans, and mutations of this gene produce intellectual disability.

“Memory erasure has the potential to alleviate PTSD and anxiety disorders by removing the non-associative memory that causes the maladaptive physiological response,” says Jiangyuan Hu, PhD, an associate research scientist in the Department of Psychiatry at CUMC and co-author of the paper. “By isolating the exact molecules that maintain non-associative memory, we may be able to develop drugs that can treat anxiety without affecting the patient’s normal memory of past events.”

“Our study is a ‘proof of principle’ that presents an opportunity for developing strategies and perhaps therapies to address anxiety,” said Dr. Schacher. “For example, because memories are still likely to change immediately after recollection, a therapist may help to ‘rewrite’ a non-associative memory by administering a drug that inhibits the maintenance of non-associative memory.”

Future studies in preclinical models are needed to better understand how PKMs are produced and localized at the synapse before researchers can determine which drugs may weaken non-associative memories.

6 years ago

Who would like to undulate in the darkness with me

8 years ago

Awww

Martin, the Carolina Wolf Spider, chewing away on his toes (tarsi) while my friend Josh lectures some elementary students on coral reefs.

6 years ago

bruh

7 years ago

Fucking love Lucifer

You… Deserve Someone Better Because You, Detective, Are Selfless To A Nauseating Degree. You Always
You… Deserve Someone Better Because You, Detective, Are Selfless To A Nauseating Degree. You Always
You… Deserve Someone Better Because You, Detective, Are Selfless To A Nauseating Degree. You Always
You… Deserve Someone Better Because You, Detective, Are Selfless To A Nauseating Degree. You Always
You… Deserve Someone Better Because You, Detective, Are Selfless To A Nauseating Degree. You Always
You… Deserve Someone Better Because You, Detective, Are Selfless To A Nauseating Degree. You Always
You… Deserve Someone Better Because You, Detective, Are Selfless To A Nauseating Degree. You Always
You… Deserve Someone Better Because You, Detective, Are Selfless To A Nauseating Degree. You Always

You… deserve someone better because you, Detective, are selfless to a nauseating degree. You always put your daughter first, even though the ungrateful urchin does nothing to contribute to the rent. So… you deserve someone worthy of that grace. Someone who knows that every crime scene breaks your heart, even though you’d never admit it. Someone who actually appreciates your impossibly boring middle name. Jane. More importantly, Detective, you deserve someone as good as you… because… well, you’re special and I’m… I’m not worth it.


Tags
  • e-llap
    e-llap liked this · 9 months ago
  • ycemlokabar
    ycemlokabar liked this · 1 year ago
  • kenethluna
    kenethluna liked this · 1 year ago
  • cronulicious
    cronulicious reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • xrinnas-sims
    xrinnas-sims liked this · 1 year ago
  • royalhoneysstuff
    royalhoneysstuff liked this · 1 year ago
  • vontreesedita
    vontreesedita liked this · 2 years ago
  • grumpy-lexicat
    grumpy-lexicat liked this · 2 years ago
  • clerks-mlm
    clerks-mlm liked this · 2 years ago
  • libavinne
    libavinne liked this · 2 years ago
  • trashbinkin
    trashbinkin liked this · 2 years ago
  • treacherous-dwarf-of-the-seas
    treacherous-dwarf-of-the-seas reblogged this · 2 years ago
  • treacherous-dwarf-of-the-seas
    treacherous-dwarf-of-the-seas liked this · 2 years ago
  • tasklinemgr
    tasklinemgr reblogged this · 2 years ago
  • tasklinemgr
    tasklinemgr liked this · 2 years ago
  • stillseren
    stillseren liked this · 2 years ago
  • wallpuncherrr
    wallpuncherrr reblogged this · 2 years ago
  • wallpuncherrr
    wallpuncherrr liked this · 2 years ago
  • emotionalsupportcatboy
    emotionalsupportcatboy reblogged this · 2 years ago
  • overclockedroulette
    overclockedroulette reblogged this · 2 years ago
  • overclockedroulette
    overclockedroulette liked this · 2 years ago
  • homoeroticvillain
    homoeroticvillain reblogged this · 2 years ago
  • homoeroticvillain
    homoeroticvillain liked this · 2 years ago
  • kalunfinch
    kalunfinch reblogged this · 2 years ago
  • kalunfinch
    kalunfinch liked this · 2 years ago
  • zapsoda
    zapsoda reblogged this · 2 years ago
  • zapsoda
    zapsoda liked this · 2 years ago
  • bubblegum-snowdrop
    bubblegum-snowdrop liked this · 2 years ago
  • ghostfixedsysknight
    ghostfixedsysknight reblogged this · 2 years ago
  • ghostfixedsysknight
    ghostfixedsysknight liked this · 2 years ago
  • menthe-bark
    menthe-bark reblogged this · 2 years ago
  • birdyie
    birdyie liked this · 2 years ago
  • swagmeowmeow
    swagmeowmeow reblogged this · 2 years ago
  • mg-dl
    mg-dl reblogged this · 2 years ago
  • lifeofcynch
    lifeofcynch reblogged this · 2 years ago
  • lifeofcynch
    lifeofcynch liked this · 2 years ago
  • glitch-pep
    glitch-pep liked this · 2 years ago
ourvioletdeath - Inner Ramblings of the Mind
Inner Ramblings of the Mind

205 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags