“…The retrosplenial cortex (RSC) is a densely connected cortical region essential for spatial learning, memory, and navigation (Alexander et al, 2020; Alexander and Nitz, 2017; Chrastil, 2018; Hinman et al, 2018; Spiers and Barry, 2015; Todd and Bucci, 2015; Valenstein et al, 1987; Vann et al, 2009), as well as contextual fear conditioning (Corcoran et al, 2011; Keene and Bucci, 2008a, 2008b; Kwapis et al, 2015; Yamawaki et al, 2019b, 2019a). The superficial layers of the granular RSC (RSG) contain two subtypes of principal excitatory pyramidal neurons that have strikingly distinct physiology, morphology, and computational capabilities: the low-rheobase (LR) neuron and the regular-spiking (RS) neuron (Brennan et al, 2020; Kurotani et al, 2013; Yousuf et al, 2020). The RSG receives inputs from many regions, including the anterior thalamus (Ichinohe et al, 2008; O‘Mara, 2013; Shibata, 1993; van Groen and Wyss, 1995; Yamawaki et al, 2019b), subiculum (Yamawaki et al, 2019a, 2019b, Opalka et al, 2020; Nitzan et al, 2020), hippocampus (Alexander et al, 2018; Wyss and van Groen, 1992; Yamawaki et al, 2019b), claustrum (van Groen and Wyss, 2003, 1990; Wang et al, 2017), and cingulate cortex (van Groen and Wyss, 1990, 2003), among others.…”