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Neural Representations Space Hippocampus

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Seminar✓ Recording AvailableNeuroscience

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

Hannah Payne

Aronov lab, Columbia University

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Tuesday, November 30, 2021

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Tuesday, November 30, 2021

5:00 PM Europe/Berlin

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Abstract

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.

Topics

ethological needsfood-cachinghippocampusneural activityplace cellssharp-wave ripplesspatial memorytufted titmicevertebrates

About the Speaker

Hannah Payne

Aronov lab, Columbia University

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Personal Website

scholar.google.com/citations

@HannahPaynePhD

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twitter.com/HannahPaynePhD

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