Experience-dependent, asymmetric expansion of hippocampal place fields

  1. Mayank R. Mehta,
  2. Carol A. Barnes, and
  3. Bruce L. McNaughton*
  1. ARL Division of Neural Systems, Memory and Aging, Department of Psychology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85724

Abstract

Theories of sequence learning based on temporally asymmetric, Hebbian long-term potentiation predict that during route learning the spatial firing distributions of hippocampal neurons should enlarge in a direction opposite to the animal’s movement. On a route AB, increased synaptic drive from cells representing A would cause cells representing B to fire earlier and more robustly. These effects appeared within a few laps in rats running on closed tracks. This provides indirect evidence for Hebbian synaptic plasticity and a functional explanation for why place cells become directionally selective during route following, namely, to preserve the synaptic asymmetry necessary to encode the sequence direction.

Footnotes

  • * To whom reprint requests should be addressed at: Life Sciences North Building, Room 384, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85724. e-mail: bruce{at}nsma.arizona.edu.

  • Mortimer Mishkin, National Institute of Mental Health, Bethesda, MD

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