TopicNeuro

hippocampus

50 Seminars40 ePosters2 Positions

Latest

PositionNeuroscience

Dr. Loren Frank

University of California, San Francisco
San Francisco, USA
Jan 4, 2026

The Frank Lab at the University of California, San Francisco is looking for a Junior Specialist Technician to begin work January 2021 or later. This is a full-time paid position with a two-year minimum commitment required. During this time, the technician will work directly with a postdoctoral fellow and may also contribute to other lab projects as time allows. The lab investigates the neural underpinnings of learning and memory by collecting in vivo electrophysiological recordings from the hippocampus of rats while they learn and perform complex, memory-dependent behaviors. We have developed cutting-edge decoding algorithms to capture neural representations of spatial location as rats navigate an environment. The specific project aims to measure how such spatial representations are altered in aged rats compared to young rats and assess whether changes in spatial representation might drive changes in performance of a memory-dependent task. Please reach out to Anna Gillespie (postdoc) if interested. Responsibilities include: Handling and behavioral training of rats Construction of microelectrode drives Participation in rat implant surgeries Development of behavioral and neural data analyses Collection of large scale electrophysiological and behavioral datasets

PositionNeuroscience

Federico Stella

Donders Institute of Radboud University
Donders Institute of Radboud University in Nijmegen, NL
Jan 4, 2026

The project will focus on the computational investigation of the role of neural reactivations in memory. Since their discovery neural reactivations happening during sleep have emerged as an exceptional tool to investigate the process of memory formation in the brain. This phenomenon has been mostly associated with the hippocampus, an area known for its role in the processing of new memories and their initial storage. Continuous advancements in data acquisition techniques are giving us an unprecedented access to the activity of large-scale networks during sleep, in the hippocampus and in other cortical regions. At the same time, our theoretical understanding of the computations underlying neural reactivations and more in general memory representations, has only began to take shape. Combining mathematical modeling of neural networks and analysis of existing dataset, we will address some key aspects of this phenomenon such as: 1) The role of different sleep phases in regulating the reactivation process and in modulating the evolution of a memory trace. 2) The relationship of hippocampal reactivations to the process of (semantic) learning and knowledge generalization. 3) The relevance of reactivation statistical properties for learning in cortico-hippocampal networks.

SeminarNeuroscience

Organization of thalamic networks and mechanisms of dysfunction in schizophrenia and autism

Vasileios Zikopoulos
Boston University
Nov 3, 2025

Thalamic networks, at the core of thalamocortical and thalamosubcortical communications, underlie processes of perception, attention, memory, emotions, and the sleep-wake cycle, and are disrupted in mental disorders, including schizophrenia and autism. However, the underlying mechanisms of pathology are unknown. I will present novel evidence on key organizational principles, structural, and molecular features of thalamocortical networks, as well as critical thalamic pathway interactions that are likely affected in disorders. This data can facilitate modeling typical and abnormal brain function and can provide the foundation to understand heterogeneous disruption of these networks in sleep disorders, attention deficits, and cognitive and affective impairments in schizophrenia and autism, with important implications for the design of targeted therapeutic interventions

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

The hippocampus, visual perception and visual memory

Morris Moscovitch
University of Toronto
May 6, 2025
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Memory Decoding Journal Club: Reconstructing a new hippocampal engram for systems reconsolidation and remote memory updating

Randal A. Koene
Co-Founder and Chief Science Officer, Carboncopies
Apr 8, 2025

Join us for the Memory Decoding Journal Club, a collaboration between the Carboncopies Foundation and BPF Aspirational Neuroscience. This month, we're diving into a groundbreaking paper: 'Reconstructing a new hippocampal engram for systems reconsolidation and remote memory updating' by Bo Lei, Bilin Kang, Yuejun Hao, Haoyu Yang, Zihan Zhong, Zihan Zhai, and Yi Zhong from Tsinghua University, Beijing Academy of Artificial Intelligence, IDG/McGovern Institute of Brain Research, and Peking Union Medical College. Dr. Randal Koene will guide us through an engaging discussion on these exciting findings and their implications for neuroscience and memory research.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Altered grid-like coding in early blind people and the role of vision in conceptual navigation

Roberto Bottini
CIMeC, University of Trento
Mar 6, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

Memory formation in hippocampal microcircuit

Andreakos Nikolaos
Visiting Scientist, School of Computer Science, University of Lincoln, Scientific Associate, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
Feb 7, 2025

The centre of memory is the medial temporal lobe (MTL) and especially the hippocampus. In our research, a more flexible brain-inspired computational microcircuit of the CA1 region of the mammalian hippocampus was upgraded and used to examine how information retrieval could be affected under different conditions. Six models (1-6) were created by modulating different excitatory and inhibitory pathways. The results showed that the increase in the strength of the feedforward excitation was the most effective way to recall memories. In other words, that allows the system to access stored memories more accurately.

SeminarNeuroscience

Contribution of computational models of reinforcement learning to neurosciences/ computational modeling, reward, learning, decision-making, conditioning, navigation, dopamine, basal ganglia, prefrontal cortex, hippocampus

Khamasi Mehdi
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique / Sorbonne University
Nov 8, 2024
SeminarNeuroscience

Neural codes for natural behaviors in the hippocampus of flying bat

Nachum Ulanovsky
Weizmann Institute of Science, Israël
Apr 15, 2024
SeminarNeuroscience

Learning representations of specifics and generalities over time

Anna Schapiro
University of Pennsylvania
Apr 12, 2024

There is a fundamental tension between storing discrete traces of individual experiences, which allows recall of particular moments in our past without interference, and extracting regularities across these experiences, which supports generalization and prediction in similar situations in the future. One influential proposal for how the brain resolves this tension is that it separates the processes anatomically into Complementary Learning Systems, with the hippocampus rapidly encoding individual episodes and the neocortex slowly extracting regularities over days, months, and years. But this does not explain our ability to learn and generalize from new regularities in our environment quickly, often within minutes. We have put forward a neural network model of the hippocampus that suggests that the hippocampus itself may contain complementary learning systems, with one pathway specializing in the rapid learning of regularities and a separate pathway handling the region’s classic episodic memory functions. This proposal has broad implications for how we learn and represent novel information of specific and generalized types, which we test across statistical learning, inference, and category learning paradigms. We also explore how this system interacts with slower-learning neocortical memory systems, with empirical and modeling investigations into how the hippocampus shapes neocortical representations during sleep. Together, the work helps us understand how structured information in our environment is initially encoded and how it then transforms over time.

SeminarNeuroscience

Learning produces a hippocampal cognitive map in the form of an orthogonalized state machine

Nelson Spruston
Janelia, Ashburn, USA
Mar 6, 2024

Cognitive maps confer animals with flexible intelligence by representing spatial, temporal, and abstract relationships that can be used to shape thought, planning, and behavior. Cognitive maps have been observed in the hippocampus, but their algorithmic form and the processes by which they are learned remain obscure. Here, we employed large-scale, longitudinal two-photon calcium imaging to record activity from thousands of neurons in the CA1 region of the hippocampus while mice learned to efficiently collect rewards from two subtly different versions of linear tracks in virtual reality. The results provide a detailed view of the formation of a cognitive map in the hippocampus. Throughout learning, both the animal behavior and hippocampal neural activity progressed through multiple intermediate stages, gradually revealing improved task representation that mirrored improved behavioral efficiency. The learning process led to progressive decorrelations in initially similar hippocampal neural activity within and across tracks, ultimately resulting in orthogonalized representations resembling a state machine capturing the inherent struture of the task. We show that a Hidden Markov Model (HMM) and a biologically plausible recurrent neural network trained using Hebbian learning can both capture core aspects of the learning dynamics and the orthogonalized representational structure in neural activity. In contrast, we show that gradient-based learning of sequence models such as Long Short-Term Memory networks (LSTMs) and Transformers do not naturally produce such orthogonalized representations. We further demonstrate that mice exhibited adaptive behavior in novel task settings, with neural activity reflecting flexible deployment of the state machine. These findings shed light on the mathematical form of cognitive maps, the learning rules that sculpt them, and the algorithms that promote adaptive behavior in animals. The work thus charts a course toward a deeper understanding of biological intelligence and offers insights toward developing more robust learning algorithms in artificial intelligence.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Seizure control by electrical stimulation: parameters and mechanisms

Dominique Durand
Case Western
Jan 31, 2024

Seizure suppression by deep brain stimulation (DBS) applies high frequency stimulation (HFS) to grey matter to block seizures. In this presentation, I will present the results of a different method that employs low frequency stimulation (LFS) (1 to 10Hz) of white matter tracts to prevent seizures. The approach has been shown to be effective in the hippocampus by stimulating the ventral and dorsal hippocampal commissure in both animal and human studies respectively for mesial temporal lobe seizures. A similar stimulation paradigm has been shown to be effective at controlling focal cortical seizures in rats with corpus callosum stimulation. This stimulation targets the axons of the corpus callosum innervating the focal zone at low frequencies (5 to 10Hz) and has been shown to significantly reduce both seizure and spike frequency. The mechanisms of this suppression paradigm have been elucidated with in-vitro studies and involve the activation of two long-lasting inhibitory potentials GABAB and sAHP. LFS mechanisms are similar in both hippocampus and cortical brain slices. Additionally, the results show that LFS does not block seizures but rather decreases the excitability of the tissue to prevent seizures. Three methods of seizure suppression, LFS applied to fiber tracts, HFS applied to focal zone and stimulation of the anterior nucleus of the thalamus (ANT) were compared directly in the same animal in an in-vivo epilepsy model. The results indicate that LFS generated a significantly higher level of suppression, indicating LFS of white matter tract could be a useful addition as a stimulation paradigm for the treatment of epilepsy.

SeminarNeuroscience

Freeze or flee ? New insights from rodent models of autism

Sumantra “Shona” Chattarji
Director, CHINTA, TCG Centres for Research and Education in Science & Technology, Kolkata, India & Visiting Professor, Simons Initiative for the Developing Brain, University of Edinburgh, UK
Jun 22, 2023

Individuals afflicted with certain types of autism spectrum disorder often exhibit impaired cognitive function alongside enhanced emotional symptoms and mood lability. However, current understanding of the pathogenesis of autism and intellectual disabilities is based primarily on studies in the hippocampus and cortex, brain areas involved in cognitive function. But, these disorders are also associated with strong emotional symptoms, which are likely to involve changes in the amygdala and other brain areas. In this talk I will highlight these issues by presenting analyses in rat models of ASD/ID lacking Nlgn3 and Frm1 (causing Fragile X Syndrome). In addition to identifying new circuit and cellular alterations underlying divergent patterns of fear expression, these findings also suggest novel therapeutic strategies.

SeminarNeuroscience

How curiosity affects learning and information seeking via the dopaminergic circuit

Matthias J. Gruber
Cardiff University, UK
Jun 13, 2023

Over the last decade, research on curiosity – the desire to seek new information – has been rapidly growing. Several studies have shown that curiosity elicits activity within the dopaminergic circuit and thereby enhances hippocampus-dependent learning. However, given this new field of research, we do not have a good understanding yet of (i) how curiosity-based learning changes across the lifespan, (ii) why some people show better learning improvements due to curiosity than others, and (iii) whether lab-based research on curiosity translates to how curiosity affects information seeking in real life. In this talk, I will present a series of behavioural and neuroimaging studies that address these three questions about curiosity. First, I will present findings on how curiosity and interest affect learning differently in childhood and adolescence. Second, I will show data on how inter-individual differences in the magnitude of curiosity-based learning depend on the strength of resting-state functional connectivity within the cortico-mesolimbic dopaminergic circuit. Third, I will present findings on how the level of resting-state functional connectivity within this circuit is also associated with the frequency of real-life information seeking (i.e., about Covid-19-related news). Together, our findings help to refine our recently proposed framework – the Prediction, Appraisal, Curiosity, and Exploration (PACE) framework – that attempts to integrate theoretical ideas on the neurocognitive mechanisms of how curiosity is elicited, and how curiosity enhances learning and information seeking. Furthermore, our findings highlight the importance of curiosity research to better understand how curiosity can be harnessed to improve learning and information seeking in real life.

SeminarNeuroscience

Establishment and aging of the neuronal DNA methylation landscape in the hippocampus

Sara Zocher, PhD
German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE), Dresden
Apr 12, 2023

The hippocampus is a brain region with key roles in memory formation, cognitive flexibility and emotional control. Yet hippocampal function is impaired severely during aging and in neurodegenerative diseases, and impairments in hippocampal function underlie age-related cognitive decline. Accumulating evidence suggests that the deterioration of the neuron-specific epigenetic landscape during aging contributes to their progressive, age-related dysfunction. For instance, we have recently shown that aging is associated with pronounced alterations of neuronal DNA methylation patterns in the hippocampus. Because neurons are generated mostly during development with limited replacement in the adult brain, they are particularly long-lived cells and have to maintain their cell-type specific gene expression programs life-long in order to preserve brain function. Understanding the epigenetic mechanisms that underlie the establishment and long-term maintenance of neuron-specific gene expression programs, will help us to comprehend the sources and consequences of their age-related deterioration. In this talk, I will present our recent work that investigated the role of DNA methylation in the establishment of neuronal gene expression programs and neuronal function, using adult neurogenesis in the hippocampus as a model. I will then describe the effects of aging on the DNA methylation landscape in the hippocampus and discuss the malleability of the aging neuronal methylome to lifestyle and environmental stimulation.

SeminarNeuroscience

Relations and Predictions in Brains and Machines

Kim Stachenfeld
Deepmind
Apr 7, 2023

Humans and animals learn and plan with flexibility and efficiency well beyond that of modern Machine Learning methods. This is hypothesized to owe in part to the ability of animals to build structured representations of their environments, and modulate these representations to rapidly adapt to new settings. In the first part of this talk, I will discuss theoretical work describing how learned representations in hippocampus enable rapid adaptation to new goals by learning predictive representations, while entorhinal cortex compresses these predictive representations with spectral methods that support smooth generalization among related states. I will also cover recent work extending this account, in which we show how the predictive model can be adapted to the probabilistic setting to describe a broader array of generalization results in humans and animals, and how entorhinal representations can be modulated to support sample generation optimized for different behavioral states. In the second part of the talk, I will overview some of the ways in which we have combined many of the same mathematical concepts with state-of-the-art deep learning methods to improve efficiency and performance in machine learning applications like physical simulation, relational reasoning, and design.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Developmentally structured coactivity in the hippocampal trisynaptic loop

Roman Huszár
Buzsáki Lab, New York University
Apr 5, 2023

The hippocampus is a key player in learning and memory. Research into this brain structure has long emphasized its plasticity and flexibility, though recent reports have come to appreciate its remarkably stable firing patterns. How novel information incorporates itself into networks that maintain their ongoing dynamics remains an open question, largely due to a lack of experimental access points into network stability. Development may provide one such access point. To explore this hypothesis, we birthdated CA1 pyramidal neurons using in-utero electroporation and examined their functional features in freely moving, adult mice. We show that CA1 pyramidal neurons of the same embryonic birthdate exhibit prominent cofiring across different brain states, including behavior in the form of overlapping place fields. Spatial representations remapped across different environments in a manner that preserves the biased correlation patterns between same birthdate neurons. These features of CA1 activity could partially be explained by structured connectivity between pyramidal cells and local interneurons. These observations suggest the existence of developmentally installed circuit motifs that impose powerful constraints on the statistics of hippocampal output.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Are place cells just memory cells? Probably yes

Stefano Fusi
Columbia University, New York
Mar 22, 2023

Neurons in the rodent hippocampus appear to encode the position of the animal in physical space during movement. Individual ``place cells'' fire in restricted sub-regions of an environment, a feature often taken as evidence that the hippocampus encodes a map of space that subserves navigation. But these same neurons exhibit complex responses to many other variables that defy explanation by position alone, and the hippocampus is known to be more broadly critical for memory formation. Here we elaborate and test a theory of hippocampal coding which produces place cells as a general consequence of efficient memory coding. We constructed neural networks that actively exploit the correlations between memories in order to learn compressed representations of experience. Place cells readily emerged in the trained model, due to the correlations in sensory input between experiences at nearby locations. Notably, these properties were highly sensitive to the compressibility of the sensory environment, with place field size and population coding level in dynamic opposition to optimally encode the correlations between experiences. The effects of learning were also strongly biphasic: nearby locations are represented more similarly following training, while locations with intermediate similarity become increasingly decorrelated, both distance-dependent effects that scaled with the compressibility of the input features. Using virtual reality and 2-photon functional calcium imaging in head-fixed mice, we recorded the simultaneous activity of thousands of hippocampal neurons during virtual exploration to test these predictions. Varying the compressibility of sensory information in the environment produced systematic changes in place cell properties that reflected the changing input statistics, consistent with the theory. We similarly identified representational plasticity during learning, which produced a distance-dependent exchange between compression and pattern separation. These results motivate a more domain-general interpretation of hippocampal computation, one that is naturally compatible with earlier theories on the circuit's importance for episodic memory formation. Work done in collaboration with James Priestley, Lorenzo Posani, Marcus Benna, Attila Losonczy.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Hippocampal network dynamics during impaired working memory in epileptic mice

Maryam Pasdarnavab
Ewell lab, University of Bonn
Feb 1, 2023

Memory impairment is a common cognitive deficit in temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). The hippocampus is severely altered in TLE exhibiting multiple anatomical changes that lead to a hyperexcitable network capable of generating frequent epileptic discharges and seizures. In this study we investigated whether hippocampal involvement in epileptic activity drives working memory deficits using bilateral LFP recordings from CA1 during task performance. We discovered that epileptic mice experienced focal rhythmic discharges (FRDs) while they performed the spatial working memory task. Spatial correlation analysis revealed that FRDs were often spatially stable on the maze and were most common around reward zones (25 ‰) and delay zones (50 ‰). Memory performance was correlated with stability of FRDs, suggesting that spatially unstable FRDs interfere with working memory codes in real time.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

The medial prefrontal cortex replays generalized sequences

Karola Käfer
Institute of Science and Technology Austria
Jan 11, 2023

Whilst spatial navigation is a function ascribed to the hippocampus, flexibly adapting to a change in rule depends on the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC). Single-units were recorded from the hippocampus and mPFC of rats shifting between a spatially- and cue-guided rule on a plus-maze. The mPFC population coded for the relative position between start and goal arm. During awake immobility periods, the mPFC replayed organized sequences of generalized positions which positively correlated with rule-switching performance. Conversely, hippocampal replay negatively correlated with performance and occurred independently of mPFC replay. Sequential replay in the hippocampus and mPFC may thus serve different functions.

SeminarNeuroscience

Circuit solutions for programming actions

Silvia Arber
University of Basel, Switzerland
Dec 2, 2022

The hippocampus is one of the few regions in the adult mammalian brain which is endowed with life-long neurogenesis. Despite intense investigation, it remains unclear how neurons newly-generated may retain unique functions that contribute to modulate hippocampal information processing and cognition. In this talk, I will present some recent findings revealing how enhanced forms of plasticity in adult-born neurons underlie the way they become incorporated into pre-existing networks in response to experience.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

A biologically plausible inhibitory plasticity rule for world-model learning in SNNs

Z. Liao
Columbia
Nov 10, 2022

Memory consolidation is the process by which recent experiences are assimilated into long-term memory. In animals, this process requires the offline replay of sequences observed during online exploration in the hippocampus. Recent experimental work has found that salient but task-irrelevant stimuli are systematically excluded from these replay epochs, suggesting that replay samples from an abstracted model of the world, rather than verbatim previous experiences. We find that this phenomenon can be explained parsimoniously and biologically plausibly by a Hebbian spike time-dependent plasticity rule at inhibitory synapses. Using spiking networks at three levels of abstraction–leaky integrate-and-fire, biophysically detailed, and abstract binary–we show that this rule enables efficient inference of a model of the structure of the world. While plasticity has previously mainly been studied at excitatory synapses, we find that plasticity at excitatory synapses alone is insufficient to accomplish this type of structural learning. We present theoretical results in a simplified model showing that in the presence of Hebbian excitatory and inhibitory plasticity, the replayed sequences form a statistical estimator of a latent sequence, which converges asymptotically to the ground truth. Our work outlines a direct link between the synaptic and cognitive levels of memory consolidation, and highlights a potential conceptually distinct role for inhibition in computing with SNNs.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Behavioral Timescale Synaptic Plasticity (BTSP) for biologically plausible credit assignment across multiple layers via top-down gating of dendritic plasticity

A. Galloni
Rutgers
Nov 9, 2022

A central problem in biological learning is how information about the outcome of a decision or behavior can be used to reliably guide learning across distributed neural circuits while obeying biological constraints. This “credit assignment” problem is commonly solved in artificial neural networks through supervised gradient descent and the backpropagation algorithm. In contrast, biological learning is typically modelled using unsupervised Hebbian learning rules. While these rules only use local information to update synaptic weights, and are sometimes combined with weight constraints to reflect a diversity of excitatory (only positive weights) and inhibitory (only negative weights) cell types, they do not prescribe a clear mechanism for how to coordinate learning across multiple layers and propagate error information accurately across the network. In recent years, several groups have drawn inspiration from the known dendritic non-linearities of pyramidal neurons to propose new learning rules and network architectures that enable biologically plausible multi-layer learning by processing error information in segregated dendrites. Meanwhile, recent experimental results from the hippocampus have revealed a new form of plasticity—Behavioral Timescale Synaptic Plasticity (BTSP)—in which large dendritic depolarizations rapidly reshape synaptic weights and stimulus selectivity with as little as a single stimulus presentation (“one-shot learning”). Here we explore the implications of this new learning rule through a biologically plausible implementation in a rate neuron network. We demonstrate that regulation of dendritic spiking and BTSP by top-down feedback signals can effectively coordinate plasticity across multiple network layers in a simple pattern recognition task. By analyzing hidden feature representations and weight trajectories during learning, we show the differences between networks trained with standard backpropagation, Hebbian learning rules, and BTSP.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

A multi-level account of hippocampal function in concept learning from behavior to neurons

Rob Mok
University of Cambridge
Nov 2, 2022

A complete neuroscience requires multi-level theories that address phenomena ranging from higher-level cognitive behaviors to activities within a cell. Unfortunately, we don't have cognitive models of behavior whose components can be decomposed into the neural dynamics that give rise to behavior, leaving an explanatory gap. Here, we decompose SUSTAIN, a clustering model of concept learning, into neuron-like units (SUSTAIN-d; decomposed). Instead of abstract constructs (clusters), SUSTAIN-d has a pool of neuron-like units. With millions of units, a key challenge is how to bridge from abstract constructs such as clusters to neurons, whilst retaining high-level behavior. How does the brain coordinate neural activity during learning? Inspired by algorithms that capture flocking behavior in birds, we introduce a neural flocking learning rule to coordinate units that collectively form higher-level mental constructs ("virtual clusters"), neural representations (concept, place and grid cell-like assemblies), and parallels recurrent hippocampal activity. The decomposed model shows how brain-scale neural populations coordinate to form assemblies encoding concept and spatial representations, and why many neurons are required for robust performance. Our account provides a multi-level explanation for how cognition and symbol-like representations are supported by coordinated neural assemblies formed through learning.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Lateral entorhinal cortex directly influences medial entorhinal cortex through synaptic connections in layer 1

Brianna Vandrey
University of Edinburgh
Oct 12, 2022

Standard models of episodic memory suggest that lateral (LEC) and medial entorhinal cortex (MEC) send independent inputs to the hippocampus, each carrying different types of information. Here, we describe a pathway by which information is integrated between LEC and MEC prior to reaching hippocampus. We demonstrate that LEC sends strong projections to MEC arising from neurons that receive neocortical inputs. Activation of LEC inputs drives excitation of hippocampal-projecting neurons in MEC layer 2, typically followed by inhibition that is accounted for by parallel activation of local inhibitory neurons. We therefore propose that local circuits in MEC may support integration of ‘what’ and ‘where’ information.

SeminarNeuroscience

Multi-level theory of neural representations in the era of large-scale neural recordings: Task-efficiency, representation geometry, and single neuron properties

SueYeon Chung
NYU/Flatiron
Sep 16, 2022

A central goal in neuroscience is to understand how orchestrated computations in the brain arise from the properties of single neurons and networks of such neurons. Answering this question requires theoretical advances that shine light into the ‘black box’ of representations in neural circuits. In this talk, we will demonstrate theoretical approaches that help describe how cognitive and behavioral task implementations emerge from the structure in neural populations and from biologically plausible neural networks. First, we will introduce an analytic theory that connects geometric structures that arise from neural responses (i.e., neural manifolds) to the neural population’s efficiency in implementing a task. In particular, this theory describes a perceptron’s capacity for linearly classifying object categories based on the underlying neural manifolds’ structural properties. Next, we will describe how such methods can, in fact, open the ‘black box’ of distributed neuronal circuits in a range of experimental neural datasets. In particular, our method overcomes the limitations of traditional dimensionality reduction techniques, as it operates directly on the high-dimensional representations, rather than relying on low-dimensionality assumptions for visualization. Furthermore, this method allows for simultaneous multi-level analysis, by measuring geometric properties in neural population data, and estimating the amount of task information embedded in the same population. These geometric frameworks are general and can be used across different brain areas and task modalities, as demonstrated in the work of ours and others, ranging from the visual cortex to parietal cortex to hippocampus, and from calcium imaging to electrophysiology to fMRI datasets. Finally, we will discuss our recent efforts to fully extend this multi-level description of neural populations, by (1) investigating how single neuron properties shape the representation geometry in early sensory areas, and by (2) understanding how task-efficient neural manifolds emerge in biologically-constrained neural networks. By extending our mathematical toolkit for analyzing representations underlying complex neuronal networks, we hope to contribute to the long-term challenge of understanding the neuronal basis of tasks and behaviors.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Extrinsic control and intrinsic computation in the hippocampal CA1 network

Ipshita Zutshi
Buzsáki Lab, NYU
Jul 6, 2022

A key issue in understanding circuit operations is the extent to which neuronal spiking reflects local computation or responses to upstream inputs. Several studies have lesioned or silenced inputs to area CA1 of the hippocampus - either area CA3 or the entorhinal cortex and examined the effect on CA1 pyramidal cells. However, the types of the reported physiological impairments vary widely, primarily because simultaneous manipulations of these redundant inputs have never been performed. In this study, I combined optogenetic silencing of unilateral and bilateral mEC, of the local CA1 region, and performed bilateral pharmacogenetic silencing of CA3. I combined this with high spatial resolution extracellular recordings along the CA1-dentate axis. Silencing the medial entorhinal largely abolished extracellular theta and gamma currents in CA1, without affecting firing rates. In contrast, CA3 and local CA1 silencing strongly decreased firing of CA1 neurons without affecting theta currents. Each perturbation reconfigured the CA1 spatial map. Yet, the ability of the CA1 circuit to support place field activity persisted, maintaining the same fraction of spatially tuned place fields. In contrast to these results, unilateral mEC manipulations that were ineffective in impacting place cells during awake behavior were found to alter sharp-wave ripple sequences activated during sleep. Thus, intrinsic excitatory-inhibitory circuits within CA1 can generate neuronal assemblies in the absence of external inputs, although external synaptic inputs are critical to reconfigure (remap) neuronal assemblies in a brain-state dependent manner.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Neural Circuit Mechanisms of Pattern Separation in the Dentate Gyrus

Alessandro Galloni
Rutgers University
Jun 1, 2022

The ability to discriminate different sensory patterns by disentangling their neural representations is an important property of neural networks. While a variety of learning rules are known to be highly effective at fine-tuning synapses to achieve this, less is known about how different cell types in the brain can facilitate this process by providing architectural priors that bias the network towards sparse, selective, and discriminable representations. We studied this by simulating a neuronal network modelled on the dentate gyrus—an area characterised by sparse activity associated with pattern separation in spatial memory tasks. To test the contribution of different cell types to these functions, we presented the model with a wide dynamic range of input patterns and systematically added or removed different circuit elements. We found that recruiting feedback inhibition indirectly via recurrent excitatory neurons proved particularly helpful in disentangling patterns, and show that simple alignment principles for excitatory and inhibitory connections are a highly effective strategy.

SeminarNeuroscience

Western diet consumption and memory impairment: what, when, and how?

Scott Kanoski
University of Southern California
May 17, 2022

Habitual consumption of a “Western diet”, containing higher than recommended levels of simple sugars and saturated fatty acids, is associated with cognitive impairments in humans and in various experimental animal models. Emerging findings reveal that the specific mnemonic processes that are disrupted by Western diet consumption are those that rely on the hippocampus, a brain region classically linked with memory control and more recently with the higher-order control of food intake. Our laboratory has established rat models in which excessive consumption of different components of a Western diet during the juvenile and adolescent periods of development yields long-term impairments in hippocampal-dependent memory function without concomitant increases in total caloric intake, body weight, or adiposity. Our ongoing work is investigating alterations in the gut microbiome as a potential underlying neurobiological mechanism linking early life unhealthy dietary factors to adverse neurocognitive outcomes.

SeminarNeuroscience

Forming latent codes for decision-making and spatial navigation: a generative modeling perspective

Giovanni Pezzulo
National Research Council, Rome, Italy
May 12, 2022
SeminarNeuroscience

Extrinsic control and autonomous computation in the hippocampal CA1 circuit

Ipshita Zutshi
NYU
Apr 27, 2022

In understanding circuit operations, a key issue is the extent to which neuronal spiking reflects local computation or responses to upstream inputs. Because pyramidal cells in CA1 do not have local recurrent projections, it is currently assumed that firing in CA1 is inherited from its inputs – thus, entorhinal inputs provide communication with the rest of the neocortex and the outside world, whereas CA3 inputs provide internal and past memory representations. Several studies have attempted to prove this hypothesis, by lesioning or silencing either area CA3 or the entorhinal cortex and examining the effect of firing on CA1 pyramidal cells. Despite the intense and careful work in this research area, the magnitudes and types of the reported physiological impairments vary widely across experiments. At least part of the existing variability and conflicts is due to the different behavioral paradigms, designs and evaluation methods used by different investigators. Simultaneous manipulations in the same animal or even separate manipulations of the different inputs to the hippocampal circuits in the same experiment are rare. To address these issues, I used optogenetic silencing of unilateral and bilateral mEC, of the local CA1 region, and performed bilateral pharmacogenetic silencing of the entire CA3 region. I combined this with high spatial resolution recording of local field potentials (LFP) in the CA1-dentate axis and simultaneously collected firing pattern data from thousands of single neurons. Each experimental animal had up to two of these manipulations being performed simultaneously. Silencing the medial entorhinal (mEC) largely abolished extracellular theta and gamma currents in CA1, without affecting firing rates. In contrast, CA3 and local CA1 silencing strongly decreased firing of CA1 neurons without affecting theta currents. Each perturbation reconfigured the CA1 spatial map. Yet, the ability of the CA1 circuit to support place field activity persisted, maintaining the same fraction of spatially tuned place fields, and reliable assembly expression as in the intact mouse. Thus, the CA1 network can maintain autonomous computation to support coordinated place cell assemblies without reliance on its inputs, yet these inputs can effectively reconfigure and assist in maintaining stability of the CA1 map.

SeminarNeuroscience

Functional segregation of rostral and caudal hippocampus in associative memory

Alicia Vorobiova
HSE University
Apr 7, 2022

It has long been established that the hippocampus plays a crucial role for episodic memory. As opposed to the modular approach, now it is generally assumed that being a complex structure, the HC performs multiplex interconnected functions, whose hierarchical organization provides basis for the higher cognitive functions such as semantics-based encoding and retrieval. However, the «where, when and how» properties of distinct memory aspects within and outside the HC are still under debate. Here we used a visual associative memory task as a probe to test the hypothesis about the differential involvement of the rostral and caudal portions of the human hippocampus in memory encoding, recognition and associative recall. In epilepsy patients implanted with stereo-EEG, we show that at retrieval the rostral HC is selectively active for recognition memory, whereas the caudal HC is selectively active for the associative memory. Low frequency desynchronization and high frequency synchronization characterize the temporal dynamic in encoding and retrieval. Therefore, we describe here anatomical segregation in the hippocampal contributions to associative and recognition memory.

SeminarNeuroscience

Chemogenetic therapies for epilepsy: promises and challenges

Robrecht Raedt
Ghent University
Mar 16, 2022

Expression of Gi-coupled designer receptors exclusively activated by designer drugs (DREADDs) on excitatory hippocampal neurons in the hippocampus represents a potential new therapeutic strategy for drug-resistant epilepsy. During my talk I will demonstrate that we obtained potent suppression of spontaneous epileptic seizures in mouse and a rat models for temporal lobe epilepsy using different DREADD ligands, up to one year after viral vector expression. The chemogenetic approach clearly outperforms the seizure-suppressing efficacy of currently existing anti-epileptic drugs. Besides the promises, I will also present some of the challenges associated with a potential chemogenetic therapy, including constitutive DREADD activity, tolerance effects, risk for toxicity, paradoxical excitatory effects in non-epileptic hippocampal tissue.

SeminarNeuroscience

Effects of pathological Tau on hippocampal neuronal activity and spatial memory in ageing mice

Tim Viney
University of Oxford
Feb 11, 2022

The gradual accumulation of hyperphosphorylated forms of the Tau protein (pTau) in the human brain correlate with cognitive dysfunction and neurodegeneration. I will present our recent findings on the consequences of human pTau aggregation in the hippocampal formation of a mouse tauopathy model. We show that pTau preferentially accumulates in deep-layer pyramidal neurons, leading to their neurodegeneration. In aged but not younger mice, pTau spreads to oligodendrocytes. During ‘goal-directed’ navigation, we detect fewer high-firing pyramidal cells, but coupling to network oscillations is maintained in the remaining cells. The firing patterns of individually recorded and labelled pyramidal and GABAergic neurons are similar in transgenic and non-transgenic mice, as are network oscillations, suggesting intact neuronal coordination. This is consistent with a lack of pTau in subcortical brain areas that provide rhythmic input to the cortex. Spatial memory tests reveal a reduction in short-term familiarity of spatial cues but unimpaired spatial working and reference memory. These results suggest that preserved subcortical network mechanisms compensate for the widespread pTau aggregation in the hippocampal formation. I will also briefly discuss ideas on the subcortical origins of spatial memory and the concept of the cortex as a monitoring device.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Network mechanisms underlying representational drift in area CA1 of hippocampus

Alex Roxin
CRM, Barcelona
Feb 2, 2022

Recent chronic imaging experiments in mice have revealed that the hippocampal code exhibits non-trivial turnover dynamics over long time scales. Specifically, the subset of cells which are active on any given session in a familiar environment changes over the course of days and weeks. While some cells transition into or out of the code after a few sessions, others are stable over the entire experiment. The mechanisms underlying this turnover are unknown. Here we show that the statistics of turnover are consistent with a model in which non-spatial inputs to CA1 pyramidal cells readily undergo plasticity, while spatially tuned inputs are largely stable over time. The heterogeneity in stability across the cell assembly, as well as the decrease in correlation of the population vector of activity over time, are both quantitatively fit by a simple model with Gaussian input statistics. In fact, such input statistics emerge naturally in a network of spiking neurons operating in the fluctuation-driven regime. This correspondence allows one to map the parameters of a large-scale spiking network model of CA1 onto the simple statistical model, and thereby fit the experimental data quantitatively. Importantly, we show that the observed drift is entirely consistent with random, ongoing synaptic turnover. This synaptic turnover is, in turn, consistent with Hebbian plasticity related to continuous learning in a fast memory system.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

The GluN2A Subunit of the NMDA Receptor and Parvalbumin Interneurons: A Possible Role in Interneuron Development

Steve Traynelis & Chad Camp
Emory University School of Medicine
Jan 19, 2022

N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors (NMDARs) are excitatory glutamate-gated ion channels that are expressed throughout the central nervous system. NMDARs mediate calcium entry into cells, and are involved in a host of neurological functions. The GluN2A subunit, encoded by the GRIN2A gene, is expressed by both excitatory and inhibitory neurons, with well described roles in pyramidal cells. By using Grin2a knockout mice, we show that the loss of GluN2A signaling impacts parvalbumin-positive (PV) GABAergic interneuron function in hippocampus. Grin2a knockout mice have 33% more PV cells in CA1 compared to wild type but similar cholecystokinin-positive cell density. Immunohistochemistry and electrophysiological recordings show that excess PV cells do eventually incorporate into the hippocampal network and participate in phasic inhibition. Although the morphology of Grin2a knockout PV cells is unaffected, excitability and action-potential firing properties show age-dependent alterations. Preadolescent (P20-25) PV cells have an increased input resistance, longer membrane time constant, longer action-potential half-width, a lower current threshold for depolarization-induced block of action-potential firing, and a decrease in peak action-potential firing rate. Each of these measures are corrected in adulthood, reaching wild type levels, suggesting a potential delay of electrophysiological maturation. The circuit and behavioral implications of this age-dependent PV interneuron malfunction are unknown. However, neonatal Grin2a knockout mice are more susceptible to lipopolysaccharide and febrile-induced seizures, consistent with a critical role for early GluN2A signaling in development and maintenance of excitatory-inhibitory balance. These results could provide insights into how loss-of-function GRIN2A human variants generate an epileptic phenotypes.

SeminarNeuroscience

Neural Codes for Natural Behaviors in Flying Bats

Nachum Ulanovsky
Weizmann Institute
Jan 13, 2022

This talk will focus on the importance of using natural behaviors in neuroscience research – the “Natural Neuroscience” approach. I will illustrate this point by describing studies of neural codes for spatial behaviors and social behaviors, in flying bats – using wireless neurophysiology methods that we developed – and will highlight new neuronal representations that we discovered in animals navigating through 3D spaces, or in very large-scale environments, or engaged in social interactions. In particular, I will discuss: (1) A multi-scale neural code for very large environments, which we discovered in bats flying in a 200-meter long tunnel. This new type of neural code is fundamentally different from spatial codes reported in small environments – and we show theoretically that it is superior for representing very large spaces. (2) Rapid modulation of position × distance coding in the hippocampus during collision-avoidance behavior between two flying bats. This result provides a dramatic illustration of the extreme dynamism of the neural code. (3) Local-but-not-global order in 3D grid cells – a surprising experimental finding, which can be explained by a simple physics-inspired model, which successfully describes both 3D and 2D grids. These results strongly argue against many of the classical, geometrically-based models of grid cells. (4) I will also briefly describe new results on the social representation of other individuals in the hippocampus, in a highly social multi-animal setting. The lecture will propose that neuroscience experiments – in bats, rodents, monkeys or humans – should be conducted under evermore naturalistic conditions.

SeminarNeuroscience

JAK/STAT regulation of the transcriptomic response during epileptogenesis

Amy Brooks-Kayal
Children's Hospital Colorado / UC Davis
Dec 15, 2021

Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is a progressive disorder mediated by pathological changes in molecular cascades and neural circuit remodeling in the hippocampus resulting in increased susceptibility to spontaneous seizures and cognitive dysfunction. Targeting these cascades could prevent or reverse symptom progression and has the potential to provide viable disease-modifying treatments that could reduce the portion of TLE patients (>30%) not responsive to current medical therapies. Changes in GABA(A) receptor subunit expression have been implicated in the pathogenesis of TLE, and the Janus Kinase/Signal Transducer and Activator of Transcription (JAK/STAT) pathway has been shown to be a key regulator of these changes. The JAK/STAT pathway is known to be involved in inflammation and immunity, and to be critical for neuronal functions such as synaptic plasticity and synaptogenesis. Our laboratories have shown that a STAT3 inhibitor, WP1066, could greatly reduce the number of spontaneous recurrent seizures (SRS) in an animal model of pilocarpine-induced status epilepticus (SE). This suggests promise for JAK/STAT inhibitors as disease-modifying therapies, however, the potential adverse effects of systemic or global CNS pathway inhibition limits their use. Development of more targeted therapeutics will require a detailed understanding of JAK/STAT-induced epileptogenic responses in different cell types. To this end, we have developed a new transgenic line where dimer-dependent STAT3 signaling is functionally knocked out (fKO) by tamoxifen-induced Cre expression specifically in forebrain excitatory neurons (eNs) via the Calcium/Calmodulin Dependent Protein Kinase II alpha (CamK2a) promoter. Most recently, we have demonstrated that STAT3 KO in excitatory neurons (eNSTAT3fKO) markedly reduces the progression of epilepsy (SRS frequency) in the intrahippocampal kainate (IHKA) TLE model and protects mice from kainic acid (KA)-induced memory deficits as assessed by Contextual Fear Conditioning. Using data from bulk hippocampal tissue RNA-sequencing, we further discovered a transcriptomic signature for the IHKA model that contains a substantial number of genes, particularly in synaptic plasticity and inflammatory gene networks, that are down-regulated after KA-induced SE in wild-type but not eNSTAT3fKO mice. Finally, we will review data from other models of brain injury that lead to epilepsy, such as TBI, that implicate activation of the JAK/STAT pathway that may contribute to epilepsy development.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

NMC4 Short Talk: Neural Representation: Bridging Neuroscience and Philosophy

Andrew Richmond (he/him)
Columbia University
Dec 2, 2021

We understand the brain in representational terms. E.g., we understand spatial navigation by appealing to the spatial properties that hippocampal cells represent, and the operations hippocampal circuits perform on those representations (Moser et al., 2008). Philosophers have been concerned with the nature of representation, and recently neuroscientists entered the debate, focusing specifically on neural representations. (Baker & Lansdell, n.d.; Egan, 2019; Piccinini & Shagrir, 2014; Poldrack, 2020; Shagrir, 2001). We want to know what representations are, how to discover them in the brain, and why they matter so much for our understanding of the brain. Those questions are framed in a traditional philosophical way: we start with explanations that use representational notions, and to more deeply understand those explanations we ask, what are representations — what is the definition of representation? What is it for some bit of neural activity to be a representation? I argue that there is an alternative, and much more fruitful, approach. Rather than asking what representations are, we should ask what the use of representational *notions* allows us to do in neuroscience — what thinking in representational terms helps scientists do or explain. I argue that this framing offers more fruitful ground for interdisciplinary collaboration by distinguishing the philosophical concerns that have a place in neuroscience from those that don’t (namely the definitional or metaphysical questions about representation). And I argue for a particular view of representational notions: they allow us to impose the structure of one domain onto another as a model of its causal structue. So, e.g., thinking about the hippocampus as representing spatial properties is a way of taking structures in those spatial properties, and projecting those structures (and algorithms that would implement them) them onto the brain as models of its causal structure.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

NMC4 Short Talk: Novel population of synchronously active pyramidal cells in hippocampal area CA1

Dori Grijseels (they/them)
University of Sussex
Dec 2, 2021

Hippocampal pyramidal cells have been widely studied during locomotion, when theta oscillations are present, and during short wave ripples at rest, when replay takes place. However, we find a subset of pyramidal cells that are preferably active during rest, in the absence of theta oscillations and short wave ripples. We recorded these cells using two-photon imaging in dorsal CA1 of the hippocampus of mice, during a virtual reality object location recognition task. During locomotion, the cells show a similar level of activity as control cells, but their activity increases during rest, when this population of cells shows highly synchronous, oscillatory activity at a low frequency (0.1-0.4 Hz). In addition, during both locomotion and rest these cells show place coding, suggesting they may play a role in maintaining a representation of the current location, even when the animal is not moving. We performed simultaneous electrophysiological and calcium recordings, which showed a higher correlation of activity between the LFO and the hippocampal cells in the 0.1-0.4 Hz low frequency band during rest than during locomotion. However, the relationship between the LFO and calcium signals varied between electrodes, suggesting a localized effect. We used the Allen Brain Observatory Neuropixels Visual Coding dataset to further explore this. These data revealed localised low frequency oscillations in CA1 and DG during rest. Overall, we show a novel population of hippocampal cells, and a novel oscillatory band of activity in hippocampus during rest.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Targeted Activation of Hippocampal Place Cells Drives Memory-Guided Spatial Behaviour

Nick Robinson
Häusser lab, UCL
Dec 1, 2021

The hippocampus is crucial for spatial navigation and episodic memory formation. Hippocampal place cells exhibit spatially selective activity within an environment and have been proposed to form the neural basis of a cognitive map of space that supports these mnemonic functions. However, the direct influence of place cell activity on spatial navigation behaviour has not yet been demonstrated. Using an ‘all-optical’ combination of simultaneous two-photon calcium imaging and two-photon holographically targeted optogenetics, we identified and selectively activated place cells that encoded behaviourally relevant locations in a virtual reality environment. Targeted stimulation of a small number of place cells was sufficient to bias the behaviour of animals during a spatial memory task, providing causal evidence that hippocampal place cells actively support spatial navigation and memory. Time permitting, I will also describe new experiments aimed at understanding the fundamental encoding mechanism that supports episodic memory, focussing on the role of hippocampal sequences across multiple timescales and behaviours.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Neural representations of space in the hippocampus of a food-caching bird

Hannah Payne
Aronov lab, Columbia University
Dec 1, 2021

Spatial memory in vertebrates requires brain regions homologous to the mammalian hippocampus. Between vertebrate clades, however, these regions are anatomically distinct and appear to produce different spatial patterns of neural activity. We asked whether hippocampal activity is fundamentally different even between distant vertebrates that share a strong dependence on spatial memory. We studied tufted titmice – food-caching birds capable of remembering many concealed food locations. We found mammalian-like neural activity in the titmouse hippocampus, including sharp-wave ripples and anatomically organized place cells. In a non-food-caching bird species, spatial firing was less informative and was exhibited by fewer neurons. These findings suggest that hippocampal circuit mechanisms are similar between birds and mammals, but that the resulting patterns of activity may vary quantitatively with species-specific ethological needs.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

NMC4 Short Talk: Stretching and squeezing of neuronal log firing rate distribution by psychedelic and intrinsic brain state transitions

Bradley Dearnly
University of Sheffield
Dec 1, 2021

How psychedelic drugs change the activity of cortical neuronal populations is not well understood. It is also not clear which changes are specific to transition into the psychedelic brain state and which are shared with other brain state transitions. Here, we used Neuropixels probes to record from large populations of neurons in prefrontal cortex of mice given the psychedelic drug TCB-2. The primary effect of drug ingestion was stretching of the distribution of log firing rates of the recorded population. This phenomenon was previously observed across transitions between sleep and wakefulness, which prompted us to examine how common it is. We found that modulation of the width of the log-rate distribution of a neuronal population occurred in multiple areas of the cortex and in the hippocampus even in awake drug-free mice, driven by intrinsic fluctuations in their arousal level. Arousal, however, did not explain the stretching of the log-rate distribution by TCB-2. In both psychedelic and intrinsically occurring brain state transitions, the stretching or squeezing of the log-rate distribution of an entire neuronal population were the result of a more close overlap between log-rate distributions of the upregulated and downregulated subpopulations in one brain state compared to the other brain state. Often, we also observed that the log-rate distribution of the downregulated subpopulation was stretched, whereas the log-rate distribution of the upregulated subpopulation was squeezed. In both subpopulations, the stretching and squeezing were a signature of a greater relative impact of the brain state transition on the rates of the slow-firing neurons. These findings reveal a generic pattern of reorganisation of neuronal firing rates by different kinds of brain state transitions.

ePosterNeuroscience

Neural adaptation in attractor networks implements replay trajectories in the hippocampus

Zilong Ji,Xingsi Dong,Tianhao Chu,Si Wu

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Neural adaptation in attractor networks implements replay trajectories in the hippocampus

Zilong Ji,Xingsi Dong,Tianhao Chu,Si Wu

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Neural sequence representation of stimulus value, response and surprise in hippocampus and prefrontal cortex

Bryan Souza,Luca Mazzucato,Francesco Battaglia,Jan Klee

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Neural sequence representation of stimulus value, response and surprise in hippocampus and prefrontal cortex

Bryan Souza,Luca Mazzucato,Francesco Battaglia,Jan Klee

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Neural signatures of memory retrieval in the hippocampus of freely caching chickadees

Selmaan Chettih,Dmitriy Aronov

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Neural signatures of memory retrieval in the hippocampus of freely caching chickadees

Selmaan Chettih,Dmitriy Aronov

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Nonlocal Spatiotemporal Representation in the Hippocampus of Freely Flying Bats

Nicholas Dotson,Michael Yartsev

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Nonlocal Spatiotemporal Representation in the Hippocampus of Freely Flying Bats

Nicholas Dotson,Michael Yartsev

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Phase precession and theta sequences in the hippocampus are spatially and temporally segregated

Federico Stella,Matteo Guardamagna,Francesco Battaglia

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Phase precession and theta sequences in the hippocampus are spatially and temporally segregated

Federico Stella,Matteo Guardamagna,Francesco Battaglia

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

The representational geometry of social memory in the hippocampus

Lorenzo Posani,Lara Boyle,Sarah Irfan,Steven A. Siegelbaum,Stefano Fusi

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

The representational geometry of social memory in the hippocampus

Lorenzo Posani,Lara Boyle,Sarah Irfan,Steven A. Siegelbaum,Stefano Fusi

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Reward-related dynamics of dopamine in the hippocampus

Marielena Sosa,Mark Plitt,Lisa Giocomo

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Reward-related dynamics of dopamine in the hippocampus

Marielena Sosa,Mark Plitt,Lisa Giocomo

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Signatures of rapid synaptic learning in the hippocampus during novel experiences

James Priestley,John Bowler,Sebi Rolotti,Stefano Fusi,Attila Losonczy

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Signatures of rapid synaptic learning in the hippocampus during novel experiences

James Priestley,John Bowler,Sebi Rolotti,Stefano Fusi,Attila Losonczy

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

Coordinated geometric representations of learned knowledge in hippocampus and frontal cortex

Manuel Schottdorf, Joshua B. Julian, Jesse C. Kaminsky, Carlos Brody, David W. Tank*

COSYNE 2023

ePosterNeuroscience

Experience, Not Time, Determines Representational Drift in the Hippocampus

Dorgham Khatib, Aviv Ratzon, Mariell Sellevoll, Genela Morris, Omri Barak, Dori Derdikman

COSYNE 2023

ePosterNeuroscience

Inter-animal variability in learning depends on transfer of pre-task experience via the hippocampus

Cristofer Holobetz, Zhuonan Yang, Greer Williams, Shrabasti Jana, David Kastner

COSYNE 2023

ePosterNeuroscience

Metric space learning in the hippocampus

Zhenrui Liao & Attila Losonczy

COSYNE 2023

ePosterNeuroscience

NeuralPlayground: A Standardised Environment for Evaluating Models of Hippocampus and Entorhinal Cortex

Clementine Domine, Rodrigo Carrasco-Davis, Andrew Saxe, Luke Hollingsworth, Caswell Barry

COSYNE 2023

ePosterNeuroscience

Place Field Dynamics as a Window on Synaptic Plasticity in the Hippocampus

Antoine Madar & Mark Sheffield

COSYNE 2023

ePosterNeuroscience

Place Cells are Clustered by Field Location in CA1 Hippocampus

Hannah Wirtshafter & John Disterhoft

COSYNE 2023

ePosterNeuroscience

Barcode activity in a recurrent network model of the hippocampus enables efficient memory binding

Ching Fang, Jack Lindsey, Larry Abbott, Dmitriy Aronov, Selmaan Chettih

COSYNE 2025

ePosterNeuroscience

Can BTSP mediate credit assignment in the hippocampus?

Ian Cone, Claudia Clopath, Rui Ponte Costa

COSYNE 2025

ePosterNeuroscience

Continuous rotation of allocentric spatial maps in the hippocampus during reorientation

Quinn Lee, Tianmeng Xu, Mark P. Brandon

COSYNE 2025

ePosterNeuroscience

Place and reward coding of a remote auditory signal in the hippocampus

Shiladitya Laskar, Shai Abramson, Ohad Rechnitz, Genela Morris, Dori Derdikman

COSYNE 2025

ePosterNeuroscience

Reactivations in hippocampus and V1 simulate novel trajectories through familiar space

Zuzanna Slonina, Caswell Barry, Romain Bourboulou, Thomas Jahans-Price, Robin Hayman, Matteo Carandini

COSYNE 2025

ePosterNeuroscience

Theta oscillations in the hippocampus modulate memory coding beyond just the movement state.

Mengni Wang, Li Yuan, Priscilla Ee, Junhao Zhu, Stefan Leutgeb, Jill Leutgeb

COSYNE 2025

ePosterNeuroscience

Activation of Ca2+-permeable AMPARs and intracellular calcium stores are required for structural plasticity induced by sTBS in the mouse hippocampus

Laura Koek, Gregory Bond, Thomas Sanderson, John Georgiou, Benjamin Scholl, Graham Collingridge

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Activation of group II metabotropic glutamate receptors rescues the ventral hippocampus-ventral tegmental area circuit from amphetamine sensitization

Katarzyna Rekawek, Karin Mueller, Stefan Boehm, Ornella Valenti

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Alteration of NMDA receptors in different excitatory synapses in the hippocampus of APP/PS1 transgenic mice

Rocio Alfaro Ruiz, Carolina Aguado, Alejandro Martín Belmonte, Ana Esther Moreno-Martinez, Miriam Fernández, Maria de los Llanos Martínez-Poyato, Ricardo Alonso Puertas-Avendaño, Yugo Fukazawa, Rafael Lujan

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Amygdalar regulation of memory engrams in the hippocampus: Spotlight on sex differences

Sara Enrile Lacalle, Ahsan Raza, Oliver Stork, Gürsel Çalışkan

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Astrocyte calcium signaling involvement in hippocampus-prefrontal cortex

João Machado, Inês Caetano, João Filipe Viana, Daniela Sofia Abreu, Sara Barsanti, Alexandra Veiga, José Duarte Dias, João Filipe Oliveira

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Astrocyte noradrenaline α-1A receptor activation induces changes to inhibitory synaptic transmission in the hippocampus and reduces the frequency of pharmacoresistant spontaneous seizures

Marcus Dyer, Sofie Bournons, Jérôme Wahis, Matthew Holt, Raedt Robrecht, Ilse Smolders, Dimitri De Bundel

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Astrocytes provide the temporal dynamic required for theta-driven memory formation in the hippocampus

Silas Larsen, Nikolaj Winther Hansen, Navneet A Vasistha, Konstantin Khodosevich, Jean-Francois Perrier

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Bioorthogonal tag: A modern way to visualize polyaminated proteins in hippocampus

Aleksandra Owczarek, Maciej Zakrzewski, Filip Suchożebski, Julia Łukasiewicz, Remigiusz Serva, Michał Węgrzynowicz

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Brain-wide microstrokes affect the stability of memory circuits in the hippocampus

Hendrik Heiser, Filippo Kiessler, Adrian Roggenbach, Martin Wieckhorst, Fritjof Helmchen, Julijana Gjorgjieva, Anna-Sophia Wahl

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

A brainstem-hippocampus system-level interaction supports memory formation

Juan F. Ramirez-Villegas, Damaris K. Rangel-Guerrero, Peter Baracskay, Jozsef Csicsvari

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Neural Dynamics of Memory Formation in the Primate Hippocampus

Elizabeth Buffalo

Bernstein Conference 2024

hippocampus coverage

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