Pattern separation, pattern completion, and new neuronal codes within a continuous CA3 map.
Stefan Leutgeb,Jill K. Leutgeb +1 more
TL;DR: CA3 cell ensembles may support the fast acquisition of detailed memories by providing a locally continuous, but globally orthogonal representation, which can rapidly provide a new neuronal index when information is encountered for the first time.
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Abstract: The hippocampal CA3 subregion is critical for rapidly encoding new memories, which suggests that neuronal computations are implemented in its circuitry that cannot be performed elsewhere in the hippocampus or in the neocortex. Recording studies show that CA3 cells are bound to a large degree to a spatial coordinate system, while CA1 cells can become more independent of a map-based mechanism and allow for a larger degree of arbitrary associations, also in the temporal domain. The mapping of CA3 onto a spatial coordinate system intuitively points to its role in spatial navigation but does not directly suggest how such a mechanism may support memory processing. Although bound to spatial coordinates, the CA3 network can rapidly alter its firing rate in response to novel sensory inputs and is thus not as strictly tied to spatial mapping as grid cells in the medial entorhinal cortex. Such rate coding within an otherwise stable spatial map can immediately incorporate new sensory inputs into the two-dimensional matrix of CA3, where they can be integrated with already stored information about each place. CA3 cell ensembles may thus support the fast acquisition of detailed memories by providing a locally continuous, but globally orthogonal representation, which can rapidly provide a new neuronal index when information is encountered for the first time. This information can be interpreted in CA1 and other downstream cortical areas in the context of less spatially restricted information.
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Citations
Reduction of hippocampal hyperactivity improves cognition in amnestic mild cognitive impairment.
Arnold Bakker,Gregory L. Krauss,Marilyn S. Albert,Caroline L. Speck,Lauren R. Jones,Craig E.L. Stark,Michael A. Yassa,Susan Spear Bassett,Amy L. Shelton,Michela Gallagher +9 more
TL;DR: The view that increased hippocampal activation in aMCI is a dysfunctional condition and that targeting excess hippocampal activity has therapeutic potential is supported.
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The Hippocampal Formation in Schizophrenia
TL;DR: A postmortem molecular changes suggest a selective reduction in glutamate transmission in the dentate gyrus and in its efferent fibers, the mossy fiber pathway, which could result in a resulting increase in "runaway" CA3-mediated pattern completion, generating psychotic associations and resulting in memories with psychotic content.
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High-resolution structural and functional MRI of hippocampal CA3 and dentate gyrus in patients with amnestic Mild Cognitive Impairment
Michael A. Yassa,Shauna M. Stark,Arnold Bakker,Marilyn S. Albert,Michela Gallagher,Craig E.L. Stark +5 more
TL;DR: The hypothesis that patients with amnestic MCI have deficits in pattern separation, along with hyperactive fMRI BOLD activity in the CA3 region of the hippocampus, is tested and may be evidence for a dysfunctional encoding mechanism, consistent with the predictions of computational models of hippocampal learning.
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The mechanisms for pattern completion and pattern separation in the hippocampus
TL;DR: The mechanisms for pattern completion and pattern separation are described in the context of a theory of hippocampal function in which the hippocampal CA3 system operates as a single attractor or autoassociation network to enable rapid, one-trial, associations between any spatial location and an object or reward.
Shaping of Object Representations in the Human Medial Temporal Lobe Based on Temporal Regularities
TL;DR: It is suggested that object representations in MTL come to mirror the temporal structure of the environment, supporting rapid and incidental statistical learning.
480
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