TY - JOUR
T1 - Memory modulates journey-dependent coding in the rat hippocampus
AU - Ferbinteanu, Janina
AU - Shirvalkar, Prasad
AU - Shapiro, Matthew L.
PY - 2011/6/22
Y1 - 2011/6/22
N2 - Neurons in the rat hippocampus signal current location by firing in restricted areas called place fields. During goal-directed tasks in mazes, place fields can also encode past and future positions through journey-dependent activity, which could guide hippo campus dependent behavior and underlie other temporally extended memories, such as autobiographical recollections. The relevance of journeydependent activity for hippocampal-dependent memory, however, is not well understood. Tofurther investigate the relationship between hippocampal journey-dependent activity and memory, we compared neural firing in rats performing two mnemonically distinct but behaviorally identical tasks in the plus maze: a hippocampus-dependent spatial navigation task and a hippocampus-independent cue response task. While place, prospective, and retrospective coding reflected temporally extended behavioral episodes in both tasks, memory strategy altered coding differently before and after the choice point. Before the choice point, when discriminative selection of memory strategy was critical, a switch between the tasks elicited a change in a field's coding category, so that a field that signaled current location in one task coded pending journeys in the other task. After the choice point, however, when memory strategy became irrelevant, the fields preserved coding categories across tasks, so that the same field consistently signaled either current location or the recent journeys. Additionally, on the start arm, firing rates were affected at comparable levels by task and journey; on the goal arm, firing rates predominantly encoded journey. The data demonstrate a direct link between journey-dependent coding and memory and suggest that episodes are encoded by both population and firing rate coding.
AB - Neurons in the rat hippocampus signal current location by firing in restricted areas called place fields. During goal-directed tasks in mazes, place fields can also encode past and future positions through journey-dependent activity, which could guide hippo campus dependent behavior and underlie other temporally extended memories, such as autobiographical recollections. The relevance of journeydependent activity for hippocampal-dependent memory, however, is not well understood. Tofurther investigate the relationship between hippocampal journey-dependent activity and memory, we compared neural firing in rats performing two mnemonically distinct but behaviorally identical tasks in the plus maze: a hippocampus-dependent spatial navigation task and a hippocampus-independent cue response task. While place, prospective, and retrospective coding reflected temporally extended behavioral episodes in both tasks, memory strategy altered coding differently before and after the choice point. Before the choice point, when discriminative selection of memory strategy was critical, a switch between the tasks elicited a change in a field's coding category, so that a field that signaled current location in one task coded pending journeys in the other task. After the choice point, however, when memory strategy became irrelevant, the fields preserved coding categories across tasks, so that the same field consistently signaled either current location or the recent journeys. Additionally, on the start arm, firing rates were affected at comparable levels by task and journey; on the goal arm, firing rates predominantly encoded journey. The data demonstrate a direct link between journey-dependent coding and memory and suggest that episodes are encoded by both population and firing rate coding.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=79959658031&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1241-11.2011
DO - 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1241-11.2011
M3 - Article
C2 - 21697365
AN - SCOPUS:79959658031
SN - 0270-6474
VL - 31
SP - 9135
EP - 9146
JO - Journal of Neuroscience
JF - Journal of Neuroscience
IS - 25
ER -