Hippocampal place codes are gated by behavioral engagement
Noah L. Pettit, Xintong Cindy Yuan, Christopher D. Harvey
Abstract
As animals explore an environment, the hippocampus is thought to automatically form and maintain a place code by combining sensory and self-motion signals. Instead, we observed an extensive degradation of the place code when mice voluntarily disengaged from a virtual navigation task, remarkably even as they continued to traverse the identical environment. Internal states, therefore, can strongly gate spatial maps and reorganize hippocampal activity even without sensory and self-motion changes.
Topics & Concepts
Hippocampal formationHippocampusTraverseNeuroscienceSensory systemPlace cellSpatial memoryCode (set theory)Motion (physics)PsychologyComputer scienceTask (project management)CommunicationGeographyCognitionArtificial intelligenceCartographyEngineeringWorking memorySystems engineeringProgramming languageSet (abstract data type)Memory and Neural MechanismsNeuroscience and Neuropharmacology ResearchZebrafish Biomedical Research Applications