What happens when you remove the hippocampus? - Sam Kean

4,843,268 views ・ 2014-08-26

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:06
On September 1st, 1953,
0
6688
2916
00:09
William Scoville used a hand crank and a cheap drill saw
1
9604
3636
00:13
to bore into a young man's skull, cutting away vital pieces of his brain
2
13240
4706
00:17
and sucking them out through a metal tube.
3
17946
2860
00:20
But this wasn't a scene from a horror film or a gruesome police report.
4
20806
4305
00:25
Dr. Scoville was one of the most renowned neurosurgeons of his time,
5
25111
4700
00:29
and the young man was Henry Molaison, the famous patient known as "H.M.",
6
29811
5303
00:35
whose case provided amazing insights into how our brains work.
7
35114
5352
00:40
As a boy, Henry had cracked his skull in an accident
8
40466
3400
00:43
and soon began having seizures, blacking out and losing control of bodily functions.
9
43866
5744
00:49
After enduring years of frequent episodes, and even dropping out of high school,
10
49610
4291
00:53
the desperate young man had turned to Dr. Scoville,
11
53901
3108
00:57
a daredevil known for risky surgeries.
12
57009
3193
01:00
Partial lobotomies had been used for decades to treat mental patients
13
60202
4057
01:04
based on the notion that mental functions were strictly localized
14
64259
3534
01:07
to corresponding brain areas.
15
67793
2795
01:10
Having successfully used them to reduce seizures in psychotics,
16
70588
3574
01:14
Scoville decided to remove H.M.'s hippocampus,
17
74162
3216
01:17
a part of the limbic system that was associated with emotion
18
77378
3764
01:21
but whose function was unknown.
19
81142
2639
01:23
At first glance, the operation had succeeded.
20
83781
2571
01:26
H.M.'s seizures virtually disappeared, with no change in personality,
21
86352
4241
01:30
and his IQ even improved.
22
90593
2261
01:32
But there was one problem: His memory was shot.
23
92854
3762
01:36
Besides losing most of his memories from the previous decade,
24
96616
3291
01:39
H.M. was unable to form new ones, forgetting what day it was,
25
99907
3383
01:43
repeating comments, and even eating multiple meals in a row.
26
103290
4821
01:48
When Scoville informed another expert, Wilder Penfield, of the results,
27
108111
4222
01:52
he sent a Ph.D student named Brenda Milner to study H.M. at his parents' home,
28
112333
5585
01:57
where he now spent his days doing odd chores,
29
117918
2546
02:00
and watching classic movies for the first time, over and over.
30
120464
4143
02:04
What she discovered through a series of tests and interviews
31
124607
2795
02:07
didn't just contribute greatly to the study of memory.
32
127402
3206
02:10
It redefined what memory even meant.
33
130608
3143
02:13
One of Milner's findings shed light on the obvious fact
34
133751
2941
02:16
that although H.M. couldn't form new memories, he still retained information
35
136692
4885
02:21
long enough from moment to moment to finish a sentence or find the bathroom.
36
141577
4608
02:26
When Milner gave him a random number,
37
146185
2173
02:28
he managed to remember it for fifteen minutes
38
148358
2765
02:31
by repeating it to himself constantly.
39
151123
2351
02:33
But only five minutes later, he forgot the test had even taken place.
40
153474
4590
02:38
Neuroscientists had though of memory as monolithic,
41
158064
3748
02:41
all of it essentially the same and stored throughout the brain.
42
161812
3988
02:45
Milner's results were not only the first clue for the now familiar distinction
43
165800
4068
02:49
between short-term and long-term memory,
44
169868
2668
02:52
but show that each uses different brain regions.
45
172536
3589
02:56
We now know that memory formation involves several steps.
46
176125
3244
02:59
After immediate sensory data is temporarily transcribed by neurons in the cortex,
47
179369
5465
03:04
it travels to the hippocampus,
48
184834
1908
03:06
where special proteins work to strengthen the cortical synaptic connections.
49
186742
5324
03:12
If the experience was strong enough,
50
192066
1683
03:13
or we recall it periodically in the first few days,
51
193749
2933
03:16
the hippocampus then transfers the memory back to the cortex for permanent storage.
52
196682
5465
03:22
H.M.'s mind could form the initial impressions,
53
202147
3224
03:25
but without a hippocampus to perform this memory consolidation,
54
205371
3954
03:29
they eroded, like messages scrawled in sand.
55
209325
4036
03:33
But this was not the only memory distinction Milner found.
56
213361
3204
03:36
In a now famous experiment, she asked H.M. to trace a third star
57
216565
4629
03:41
in the narrow space between the outlines of two concentric ones
58
221194
4559
03:45
while he could only see his paper and pencil through a mirror.
59
225753
3620
03:49
Like anyone else performing such an awkward task for the first time,
60
229373
3117
03:52
he did horribly.
61
232490
1807
03:54
But surprisingly, he improved over repeated trials,
62
234297
3388
03:57
even though he had no memory of previous attempts.
63
237685
3466
04:01
His unconscious motor centers remembered what the conscious mind had forgotten.
64
241151
5493
04:06
What Milner had discovered was that the declarative memory of names, dates and facts
65
246644
5046
04:11
is different from the procedural memory of riding a bicycle or signing your name.
66
251690
5566
04:17
And we now know that procedural memory
67
257256
2244
04:19
relies more on the basal ganglia and cerebellum,
68
259500
3352
04:22
structures that were intact in H.M.'s brain.
69
262852
3265
04:26
This distinction between "knowing that" and "knowing how"
70
266117
3439
04:29
has underpinned all memory research since.
71
269556
3404
04:32
H.M. died at the age of 82 after a mostly peaceful life in a nursing home.
72
272960
5192
04:38
Over the years, he had been examined by more than 100 neuroscientists,
73
278152
4404
04:42
making his the most studied mind in history.
74
282556
3194
04:45
Upon his death, his brain was preserved and scanned
75
285750
3165
04:48
before being cut into over 2000 individual slices
76
288915
3441
04:52
and photographed to form a digital map down to the level of individual neurons,
77
292356
5268
04:57
all in a live broadcast watched by 400,000 people.
78
297624
4393
05:02
Though H.M. spent most of his life forgetting things,
79
302017
2667
05:04
he and his contributions to our understanding of memory
80
304684
2918
05:07
will be remembered for generations to come.
81
307602
2411
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7