“…The subicular complex shares borders with the CA1 field, and is typically divided into four parts, the subiculum (dorsal and ventral parts), the presubiculum, parasubiculum, and transitional subicular cortex (the transitional subicular cortex being located at the caudal lateral pole of the hippocampal curvature, see Paxinos & Watson, 2009; however, in earlier versions of rat atlases the transitional subicular cortex is labeled only as subiculum, e.g., Paxinos, Carrive, Wang, & Wang, 1999). The entorhinal cortex, the gateway between the remainder of the brain and the hippocampal formation, lies laterally adjacent to the parasubiculum, and while typically composed of medial and lateral cortical areas (e.g., Witter, Doan, Jacobsen, Nilssen, & Ohara, 2017), some studies have indicated that the entorhinal cortex may be comprised of several distinct cortical areas (e.g., de Góis Morais et al, 2019; Insausti & Amaral, 2008; Schultz & Engelhardt, 2014).…”