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1.
Integr Psychol Behav Sci ; 58(2): 483-501, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38279076

ABSTRACT

Cognition is a mental process that provides the ability to think, know, and learn. Though cognitive skills are necessary to do daily tasks and activities, cognitive aging causes changes in various cognitive functions. Cognitive abilities that are preserved and strengthened by experience can be kept as a reserve and utilized when necessary. The concept of reserving cognition was found when people with Alzheimer's disease had differences in clinical manifestations and cognitive functions. The cognitive reserve builds resilience against cognitive decline and improves the quality of life. Also, several lines of studies have found that the plasticity between neurons has a significant impact on cognitive reserve and acts against cognitive decline. To extend the findings, the present study provides a comprehensive understanding of cognitive reserve and the variables that are involved in maintaining cognition. The study also considers reading as one of the cognitive proxies that develops and maintains cognitive reserve.


Subject(s)
Cognition , Cognitive Reserve , Humans , Cognitive Reserve/physiology , Cognition/physiology , Cognitive Dysfunction , Cognitive Aging/physiology , Reading , Aging/psychology , Aging/physiology , Alzheimer Disease/psychology
2.
Integr Psychol Behav Sci ; 58(1): 303-318, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36738400

ABSTRACT

Memory and learning are interdependent processes that involve encoding, storage, and retrieval. Especially memory retrieval is a fundamental cognitive ability to recall memory traces and update stored memory with new information. For effective memory retrieval and learning, the memory must be stabilized from short-term memory to long-term memory. Hence, it is necessary to understand the process of memory retention and retrieval that enhances the process of learning. Though previous cognitive neuroscience research has focused on memory acquisition and storage, the neurobiological mechanisms underlying memory retrieval and its role in learning are less understood. Therefore, this article offers the viewpoint that memory retrieval is essential for selecting, reactivating, stabilizing, and storing information in long-term memory. In arguing how memories are retrieved, consolidated, transmitted, and strengthened for the long term, the article will examine the psychological and neurobiological aspects of memory and learning with synaptic plasticity, long-term potentiation, genetic transcription, and theta oscillation in the brain.


Subject(s)
Learning , Mental Recall , Humans , Memory, Short-Term , Brain , Cognition
3.
J Psycholinguist Res ; 52(6): 2903-2917, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37930468

ABSTRACT

Research regarding dysgraphia, an impairment in writing, is attaining more attention in recent times. The existing studies on dysgraphia draw insights from cognitive, behavioural, neurological, and genetic fields of knowledge. However, these multiple studies on dysgraphia fail to illustrate how these cognitive, behavioural, neurological, and genetic systems interact and intersect in dysgraphia. Therefore, the studies could not offer a comprehensive understanding of dysgraphia. In order to fill this gap, the review attempts to study dysgraphia using the notion of modularity by accommodating insights from cognitive, behavioural, neurological, and genetic aspects of dysgraphia. Such a profound understanding could facilitate an early diagnosis and holistic intervention towards dysgraphia.


Subject(s)
Agraphia , Humans , Writing
4.
J Psycholinguist Res ; 52(4): 1237-1248, 2023 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37022624

ABSTRACT

The relationship between working memory and speech has been a topic of intense research interest and investigation for many years. Memory studies have found that the active processing of working memory is required for language comprehension and speech production. Though there are studies that discuss the capacity of working memory, the processing of verbal stimuli into verbal memory remains unclear. Therefore, it is essential to understand the functioning of the working memory and how it processes verbal information. As working memory is intricately linked with communication, any deficits in working memory could cause communication disorders. Also, the disruption in the storage and retrieval of verbal memory could cause a disturbance in the speech pattern. To this point, this review elaborates on the active processing of working memory and its role in communication. Further, by studying the deficits in working memory that could cause cognitive-communication disorders such as apraxia of speech, dementia, and dysarthria, this article highlights the importance of verbal memory in speech.


Subject(s)
Communication Disorders , Memory, Short-Term , Humans , Lip , Brain , Cognition
5.
Integr Psychol Behav Sci ; 57(1): 174-188, 2023 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35804259

ABSTRACT

Memory and language are the two higher-order cognitive abilities intertwined for communication and other cognitive skills. Memory is the storage capacity of all the information we perceive. Where the sensory memory perceives the stimuli, the working memory actively stores the information and passes it to the long-term memory. However, there is a question that how is the continuous perception of stimuli transformed into meaningful information and organized for proper execution and retrieval from the memory? This paper focuses on the episodic memory that perceives information that is spatial and temporal based on our everyday experiences. Though the spatiotemporal information we receive is continuous; the episodic memory arranges the information as to episodes in the working memory before the information is stored for a longer period. The episodic buffer is one of the components of the working memory model which holds the episodic memory that is organized concerning time. To this point, the paper tries to understand the working of the episodic buffer in maintaining the episodic memory and also about the process of episodic events into meaningful units. Further, the paper also concentrates on the hippocampus which is considered to be the location of the episodic buffer.


Subject(s)
Memory, Episodic , Memory, Short-Term , Humans , Comprehension , Cognition , Hippocampus
6.
J Biosci ; 472022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36222135

ABSTRACT

There is growing interest in understanding the genetic mechanisms underlying dyslexia. Accordingly, the literature on dyslexia is replete with shreds of evidence linking genes and their genetic markers with dyslexia among different populations. Even though genetic inquiries into dyslexia in the Asian population has gained interest in recent years, very little is known about the genes and their polymorphisms associated with dyslexia in the Indian population. To this end, we provide a systematic literature review that yields a dossier of genetic research that manifests the effect of the genes and their polymorphisms associated with dyslexia susceptibility in the Indian population. We conclude that the polymorphisms of the DYX1C1 and KIAA0319 genes deserve attention in replication studies on the Indian population in order to gain insight into the genetic etiology of dyslexia.


Subject(s)
Dyslexia , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Asian People/genetics , Dyslexia/genetics , Genetic Markers , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Humans , Nerve Tissue Proteins/genetics , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide/genetics
7.
Pediatr Neonatol ; 62(3): 240-248, 2021 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33775610

ABSTRACT

There is a growing interest in understanding dyslexia and the mechanisms involved in reading difficulties. Inquiries into the morphological and physiological changes of the brain have contributed to our increased understanding of reading ability and dyslexia. Similarly, inquiries into brain chemistry and reading provide a neurometabolic framework of dyslexia in terms of poor reading and phonological measures. Also, studies of the genetic etiology of reading yield substantial evidence of genes and SNPs associated with dyslexia. However, little is known about the interface between these distinct areas of knowledge. Therefore, we offer an exhaustive perspective on dyslexia using the idea of modularity by assimilating the findings and implications from the brain morphological, neurophysiological, neurochemical, genetic, and educational insights into dyslexia. We contend that this endeavor will provide a beneficial foundation for aiming at the possibilities of a holistic intervention and informed solutions for reading difficulties.


Subject(s)
Dyslexia , Brain , Cognition , Dyslexia/genetics , Humans , Reading
8.
J Biosci ; 44(1)2019 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30837376

ABSTRACT

Associating human genetic makeup with the faculty of language has long been a goal for biolinguistics. This stimulated the idea that language is attributed to genes and language disabilities are caused by genetic mutations. However, application of genetic knowledge on language intervention is still a gap in the existing literature. In an effort to bridge this gap, this article presents an account of genetic and neural associations of language and synthesizes the genetic, neural, epigenetic and environmental facets involved in language. In addition to describing the association of genes with language, the neural and epigenetic aspects of language are also explored. Further, the environmental aspects of language such as language input, emotion and cognition are also traced back to gene expressions. Therefore, effective language intervention for language learning difficulties must offer genetics-informed solutions, both linguistic and medical.


Subject(s)
Epigenesis, Genetic/genetics , Language Disorders/genetics , Language , Linguistics/trends , Brain/physiology , Cognition/physiology , Gene-Environment Interaction , Humans , Learning/physiology
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