Internal representation of hippocampal neuronal population spans a time-distance continuum

Abstract

International audienceThe hippocampus plays a critical role in episodic memory: the sequential representation of visited places and experienced events. This function is mirrored by hippocampal activity that self organizes into sequences of neuronal activation that integrate spatio-temporal information. What are the underlying mechanisms of such integration is still unknown. Single cell activity was recently shown to combine time and distance information; however, it remains unknown whether a degree of tuning between space and time can be defined at the network level. Here, combining daily calcium imaging of CA1 sequence dynamics in running head-fixed mice and network modeling, we show that CA1 network activity tends to represent a specific combination of space and time at any given moment, and that the degree of tuning can shift within a continuum from one day to the next. Our computational model shows that this shift in tuning can happen under the control of the external drive power. We propose that extrinsic global inputs shape the nature of spatio-temporal integration in the hippocampus at the population level depending on the task at hand, a hypothesis which may guide future experimental studies

    Similar works

    Full text

    thumbnail-image

    Available Versions

    Last time updated on 10/04/2021
    Last time updated on 10/04/2021