“…These increases in PKMζ during remote memory maintenance persist far longer than the increases of c-Fos (Kovacs, 2008) or Arc (Shepherd & Bear, 2011), which last for only hours after experience, and may equal or exceed even the long-lived increase of ΔFosB, a transcription factor that persistently increases for at least 1 day after training (Eagle et al, 2015) and for several weeks after chronic exposure to drugs of abuse (Nestler, 2008). Active place avoidance training modifies dentate gyrus responses to neocortical stimulation of the perforant path measured 1 day after training in vivo (Park, Burghardt, Dvorak, Hen, & Fenton, 2015), and extended active place avoidance training produces persistent modifications in synaptic circuitry in the CA3-CA1 pathway that can last 1 month (Pavlowsky, Wallace, Fenton, & Alarcon, 2017). Like the persistent increases in PKMζ (Fig.…”