4.7 Review

Time as the fourth dimension in the hippocampus

期刊

PROGRESS IN NEUROBIOLOGY
卷 199, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.pneurobio.2020.101920

关键词

Hippocampus; Time cells; Prospective; Retrospective coding; Phase precession; Preplay; Replay; Transitions

资金

  1. French Agence Nationale pour la Recherche grant NEUROBOT [ANR-BLAN-SIMI2-LS-100617-13-01]
  2. Labex Memolife
  3. Fondation Bettencourt-Schueller

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This passage discusses how experiences of animal and human beings are structured by the continuity of space and time, as well as the unidirectionality of time. It also highlights the central role of the hippocampal system in various temporal processing tasks. Experimental findings in rats and human studies reveal important insights into timing and sequence processing, both during active behavior and rest, shedding light on neural mechanisms and providing neural network models to explain the emergence of scalar properties.
Experiences of animal and human beings are structured by the continuity of space and time coupled with the unidirectionality of time. In addition to its pivotal position in spatial processing and navigation, the hippocampal system also plays a central, multiform role in several types of temporal processing. These include timing and sequence learning, at scales ranging from meso-scales of seconds to macro-scales of minutes, hours, days and beyond, encompassing the classical functions of short term memory, working memory, long term memory, and episodic memories (comprised of information about when, what, and where). This review article highlights the principal findings and behavioral contexts of experiments in rats showing: 1) timing: tracking time during delays by hippocampal 'time cells' and during free behavior by hippocampal-afferent lateral entorhinal cortex ramping cells; 2) 'online' sequence processing: activity coding sequences of events during active behavior; 3) 'off-line' sequence replay: during quiescence or sleep, orderly reactivation of neuronal assemblies coding awake sequences. Studies in humans show neurophysiological correlates of episodic memory comparable to awake replay. Neural mechanisms are discussed, including ion channel properties, plateau and ramping potentials, oscillations of excitation and inhibition of population activity, bursts of high amplitude discharges (sharp wave ripples), as well as short and long term synaptic modifications among and within cell assemblies. Specifically conceived neural network models will suggest processes supporting the emergence of scalar properties (Weber's law), and include different classes of feedforward and recurrent network models, with intrinsic hippocampal coding for 'transitions' (sequencing of events or places).

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