2021
DOI: 10.1101/2021.02.07.430172
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Consistent population activity on the scale of minutes in the mouse hippocampus

Abstract: Neurons in the hippocampus fire in consistent sequence over the timescale of seconds during the delay period of some memory experiments. For longer timescales, firing of hippocampal neurons also changes slowly over minutes within experimental sessions. It was thought that these slow dynamics are caused by stochastic drift or a continuous change in the representation of the episode, rather than consistent sequences unfolding over minutes. This paper studies the consistency of contextual drift in three chronic c… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Perhaps representational drift, which can be observed for very long time scales (Ziv et al, 2013; Rubin, Geva, Sheintuch, & Ziv, 2015; Cai et al, 2016; Mau et al, 2018; Mau, Hasselmo, & Cai, 2020) is responsible for the contiguity effect in episodic memory over autobiographical time. If representational drift codes for events over log time, as we observed for hippocampal time cells here, then it should be possible to trigger very slow sequences with specific environmental events (Liu et al, 2021).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 73%
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“…Perhaps representational drift, which can be observed for very long time scales (Ziv et al, 2013; Rubin, Geva, Sheintuch, & Ziv, 2015; Cai et al, 2016; Mau et al, 2018; Mau, Hasselmo, & Cai, 2020) is responsible for the contiguity effect in episodic memory over autobiographical time. If representational drift codes for events over log time, as we observed for hippocampal time cells here, then it should be possible to trigger very slow sequences with specific environmental events (Liu et al, 2021).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 73%
“…Although time cell sequences may continue much longer than the eight second delay used in this experiments (Shikano et al, 2021; Liu et al, 2022) it is difficult to imagine that time cell sequences persist for hours and days. However, it is possible that the temporal code is logarithmically compressed, perhaps by means of distinct neural mechanisms, over time scales much longer than minutes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
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