TY - JOUR
T1 - An hypothesis on the origin of variable spatial scaling along the septo-temporal axis of the rodent hippocampus
AU - McNaughton, Bruce L.
AU - Terrazas, Alejandro
AU - Barnes, Carol A.
AU - Battaglia, Francesco P.
PY - 2004
Y1 - 2004
N2 - The spatial scaling of place specific activity in the rodent hippocampus varies systematically from the septal pole (high spatial resolution) to the temporal pole (low spatial resolution). In principle, this variable scaling permits the read-out of spatial proximity relationships from spatial population vector correlations over much larger spaces than would be possible from a fixed scale encoding scheme such as might be inferred from the majority of in vivo hippocampal recordings, which have been conducted only in the septal portion of the hippocampus. Decoupling movement in space from ambulatory motion, by having the animal activate and ride on a mobile platform, results in marked attenuation of the amplitude of the local theta rhythm and a corresponding enlargement of the spatial scale factor in the dorsal hippocampus. These results lead to the hypothesis that the self-motion signal is embodied in the theta rhythm, whose gain may vary systematically along the septo-temporal axis of the hippocampus.
AB - The spatial scaling of place specific activity in the rodent hippocampus varies systematically from the septal pole (high spatial resolution) to the temporal pole (low spatial resolution). In principle, this variable scaling permits the read-out of spatial proximity relationships from spatial population vector correlations over much larger spaces than would be possible from a fixed scale encoding scheme such as might be inferred from the majority of in vivo hippocampal recordings, which have been conducted only in the septal portion of the hippocampus. Decoupling movement in space from ambulatory motion, by having the animal activate and ride on a mobile platform, results in marked attenuation of the amplitude of the local theta rhythm and a corresponding enlargement of the spatial scale factor in the dorsal hippocampus. These results lead to the hypothesis that the self-motion signal is embodied in the theta rhythm, whose gain may vary systematically along the septo-temporal axis of the hippocampus.
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M3 - Conference article
AN - SCOPUS:10944236071
SN - 1098-7576
VL - 1
SP - 643
EP - 645
JO - IEEE International Conference on Neural Networks - Conference Proceedings
JF - IEEE International Conference on Neural Networks - Conference Proceedings
T2 - 2004 IEEE International Joint Conference on Neural Networks - Proceedings
Y2 - 25 July 2004 through 29 July 2004
ER -