Platform

  • Search
  • Seminars
  • Conferences
  • Jobs

Resources

  • Submit Content
  • About Us

© 2025 World Wide

Open knowledge for all • Started with World Wide Neuro • A 501(c)(3) Non-Profit Organization

Analytics consent required

World Wide relies on analytics signals to operate securely and keep research services available. Accept to continue, or leave the site.

Review the Privacy Policy for details about analytics processing.

World Wide
SeminarsConferencesWorkshopsCoursesJobsMapsFeedLibrary
Back to SeminarsBack
Seminar✓ Recording AvailableNeuroscience

Are place cells just memory cells? Probably yes

Stefano Fusi

Columbia University, New York

Schedule
Wednesday, March 22, 2023

Showing your local timezone

Schedule

Wednesday, March 22, 2023

2:00 AM America/New_York

Watch recording
Host: van Vreeswijk TNS

Watch the seminar

Recording provided by the organiser.

Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Original Event

View source

Host

van Vreeswijk TNS

Duration

70 minutes

Abstract

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.

Topics

calcium imagingepisodic memoryhippocampusmemory codingneural networksplace cellsrepresentational plasticitysensory inputvirtual reality

About the Speaker

Stefano Fusi

Columbia University, New York

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

zuckermaninstitute.columbia.edu/stefano-fusi-phd

@StefanoFusi2

Follow on Twitter/X

twitter.com/StefanoFusi2

Related Seminars

Seminar60%

Knight ADRC Seminar

neuro

Jan 20, 2025
Washington University in St. Louis, Neurology
Seminar60%

TBD

neuro

Jan 20, 2025
King's College London
Seminar60%

Guiding Visual Attention in Dynamic Scenes

neuro

Jan 20, 2025
Haifa U
January 2026
Full calendar →