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Goal discrimination in hippocampal nonplace cells when place information is ambiguous

Lu Zhang, Stephanie M. Prince, Abigail L. Paulson, Annabelle C. Singer

2022Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

SignificanceGoal-directed spatial navigation has been found to rely on hippocampal neurons that are spatially modulated. We show that "nonplace" cells without significant spatial modulation play a role in discriminating goals when environmental cues for goals are ambiguous. This nonplace cell activity is performance-dependent and is modulated by gamma oscillations. Finally, nonplace cell goal discrimination coding fails in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Together, these results show that nonplace cell firing can signal unique task-relevant information when spatial information is ambiguous; these signals depend on performance and are absent in a mouse model of AD.

Topics & Concepts

Place cellHippocampal formationNeuroscienceCoding (social sciences)Computer scienceModulation (music)BiologyPsychologyPhysicsMathematicsAcousticsStatisticsMemory and Neural MechanismsNeuroscience and Neuropharmacology ResearchSleep and Wakefulness Research
Goal discrimination in hippocampal nonplace cells when place information is ambiguous | Litcius