Hippocampal ensemble dynamics timestamp events in long-term memory.
TL;DR: Time-lapse imaging of thousands of neurons over weeks in the hippocampal CA1 of mice as they repeatedly visited two distinct environments suggests that days-scale hippocampal ensemble dynamics could support the formation of a mental timeline in which experienced events could be mnemonically associated or dissociated based on their temporal distance.
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Abstract: The ability to recall the timing of events is an important feature of long-term memory. Episodic memory, the mental account of “what” happened, “where” and “when”, depends on a region of a brain called the hippocampus. Certain neurons in the hippocampus, called place-cells, are known to capture information about the locations an animal has visited so that a specific pattern of place cell activity marks each location an animal visits. However, it is not clear how the brain can mark the relationship between the timing of different events. Some studies have documented gradual changes in the activity patterns of the place cells over time, which could help mark time. If these changes are specific to a particular environment then they would not allow animals to associate in memory events that occurred close in time (for instance, in the same day) if these events occurred in different environments. To do that, a certain component of the changes in the activity patterns would have to be independent of any specific environment or context in which events occur. Now, Rubin, Geva et al. have captured time-lapse images of the activity of thousands of hippocampal cells in mice as they explored two different environments on repeated occasions over a two-week period. The environments had different shapes, textures, visual cues, and odors. The mice were allowed to explore each environment daily for more than a week prior to the time-lapse filming so that they would be very familiar with the two environments. During the filming portion of the experiments, the mice visited one environment in the morning, and then the other in the afternoon. The analysis of the images revealed what appeared to be unique patterns of cell activity for specific days, which gradually changed over the course of the experiment. The patterns persisted even when the animals switched to a new environment during the same day, but were different for visits to the same environment on different days. Next, Rubin, Geva et al. used the patterns of activity collected from the mice while they were in one environment to create a timeline of events. From this timeline, it was possible to accurately deduce which day each visit to the other environment occurred based on the patterns of hippocampal cell activity alone. One challenge that stems from this work is to understand the biological mechanisms that drive the patterns in neuronal activity over timescales that are relevant for long-term memory.
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Citations
Representations of complex contexts: A role for hippocampus
Halle R. Dimsdale-Zucker,Maria E Montchal,Zachariah M. Reagh,Shao-Fang Wang,Laura A. Libby,Charan Ranganath +5 more
TL;DR: This work constructed a task in which items were affiliated with differing types of context – cognitive associations that vary at the local, item level and membership in temporally organized lists that linked items together at a global level and performed voxel pattern similarity analyses to answer the question of how human hippocampal subfields represent retrieved information about cognitive states and the time at which a past event took place.
Formal models of memory based on temporally-varying representations
Marc W. Howard
- 05 Jan 2022
TL;DR: The idea that memory behavior relies on a gradually changing internal state has a long history in mathematical psychology as mentioned in this paper , and many of these models have been applied to human cognition, e.g., to the task of cued recall.
Wave-like activity patterns in the neuropil of striatal cholinergic interneurons in freely moving mice represent their collective spiking dynamics
Rotem Rehani,Yara Atamna,Lior Tiroshi,Wei-Hua Chiu,Jose de Jesus Aceves Buendia,Gabriela J. Martins,Gilad A. Jacobson,Joshua A. Goldberg +7 more
TL;DR: The data suggest that the spatiotemporal neuropil patterns are a newly described physiological measure of the collective recurrent ChI network activity.
A multiple Arc (mArc) tagging system to uncover the organizational principles of multiple memories
Michelle Stackmann,Tushar D. Yelhekar,Meizhen Meng,Xiaochen Sun,Joseph Nthumba,Nicholas E. Bulthuis,Nick Vaughan,Elaine Zhu,Yingxi Lin,Christine A. Denny +9 more
TL;DR: It is shown that similar contextual and valenced experiences are encoded in overlapping DG ensembles and that ensembles are modulated by time, where experiences closer in time are encoded in more similar ensembles.
Remembering the “When”: Hebbian Memory Models for the Time of Past Events
TL;DR: In this article , different hypotheses about how neural networks with Hebbian plasticity could enable automatic reconstruction of the time of past events were developed. But the authors conclude that many models lead to indistinguishable behavior and future experiments with neural recordings are needed to disambiguate different models.
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