Summary The hippocampal-entorhinal system is important for spatial and relational memory tasks. We formally link these domains, provide a mechanistic understanding of the hippocampal role in generalization, and offer unifying principles underlying many entorhinal and hippocampal cell types. We propose medial entorhinal cells form a basis describing structural knowledge, and hippocampal cells link this basis with sensory representations. Adopting these principles, we introduce the Tolman-Eichenbaum machine (TEM). After learning, TEM entorhinal cells display diverse properties resembling apparently bespoke spatial responses, such as grid, band, border, and object-vector cells. TEM hippocampal cells include place and landmark cells that remap between environments. Crucially, TEM also aligns with empirically recorded representations in complex non-spatial tasks. TEM also generates predictions that hippocampal remapping is not random as previously believed; rather, structural knowledge is preserved across environments. We confirm this structural transfer over remapping in simultaneously recorded place and grid cells.
Acidic dissolution of transition metals from Pt based alloy catalysts for oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) is an unavoidable process during fuel cell operation. In this work we studied the effect of acid treatment of graphene-supported Pt 1 Ni x (x ) 0, 0.25, 0.5, 1, and 2) alloys on the kinetics of the ORR in both alkaline and acidic solutions together with the generation of OH radicals in alkaline solutions. The alloy nanoparticles were synthesized through coimpregnation and chemical reduction. The electronic and structural features of the alloy were characterized by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, transmission electron microscopy, and high-resolution transmission electron microscopy. The ORR performances were studied using cyclic voltammetry and rotating ring disk electrode techniques in 0.05 M H 2 SO 4 and 0.1 M NaOH, respectively. The alloy catalysts were more active than pure Pt toward ORR, and after acid treatment the ORR activity of Pt-Ni alloy was enhanced in both acidic and alkaline media. The maximum activity of the Pt-based catalysts was found with ca. 50 atom % Ni content in the alloys (Pt 1 Ni 1 @graphene). OH radicals were generated through dissociation of hydroperoxide at the catalysts' surface and detected by fluorescence technique using terephthalic acid as capture reagent, which readily reacts with OH radical to produce highly fluorescent product, 2-hydroxyterephthalic acid. More OH radicals were found to be generated at Pt 1 Ni 1 @graphene catalyst. This work may be valuable in the design of electrocatalysts with higher ORR activity but lower efficiency of OH radical generation.
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