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Memory Representation within the Parahippocampal Region

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TLDR
It becomes increasingly clear that the parahippocampal cortex can support recognition memory independent of the distinct memory functions of the hippocampus itself, with evidence that the PHR is critical for maintaining odor memories in animals performing the same task.
Abstract
The activity of 378 single neurons was recorded from areas of the parahippocampal region (PHR), including the perirhinal and lateral entorhinal cortex, as well as the subiculum, in rats performing an odor-guided delayed nonmatching-to-sample task. Nearly every neuron fired in association with some trial event, and every identifiable trial event or behavior was encoded by neuronal activity in the PHR. The greatest proportion of cells was active during odor sampling, and for many cells, activity during this period was odor selective. In addition, odor memory coding was reflected in two general ways. First, a substantial proportion of cells showed odor-selective activity throughout or at the end of the memory delay period. Second, odor-responsive cells showed odor-selective enhancement or suppression of activity during stimulus repetition in the recognition phase of the task. These data, combined with evidence that the PHR is critical for maintaining odor memories in animals performing the same task, indicate that this cortical region mediates the encoding of specific memory cues, maintains stimulus representations, and supports specific match-nonmatch judgments critical to recognition memory. By contrast, hippocampal neurons do not demonstrate evoked or maintained stimulus-specific codings, and hippocampal damage results in little if any decrement in performance on this task. Thus it becomes increasingly clear that the parahippocampal cortex can support recognition memory independent of the distinct memory functions of the hippocampus itself.

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Citations
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The medial temporal lobe

TL;DR: This analysis draws on studies of human memory impairment and animal models of memory impairment, as well as neurophysiological and neuroimaging data, to show that this system is principally concerned with memory and operates with neocortex to establish and maintain long-term memory.
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Recognition memory: what are the roles of the perirhinal cortex and hippocampus?

TL;DR: This work focuses on the central issue in this dispute — the relative contributions of the hippocampus and the perirhinal cortex to recognition memory.
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A cortical–hippocampal system for declarative memory

TL;DR: How the cognitive and neural coding mechanisms that underlie declarative memory work together to create and re-create fully networked representations of previous experiences and knowledge about the world are described.
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The role of phase synchronization in memory processes.

TL;DR: This work proposes that processes underlying working and long-term memory might interact in the medial temporal lobe and proposes that this is accomplished by neural operations involving phase–phase and phase–amplitude synchronization.
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The role of acetylcholine in learning and memory.

TL;DR: The effects in entorhinal and perirhinal cortex and hippocampus might be important for encoding new episodic memories, and computational modeling links the function of cholinergic modulation to specific cellular effects within these regions.
References
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Book

The Hippocampus as a Cognitive Map

John O'Keefe, +1 more
TL;DR: The amnesic syndrome is presented as an extension of the theory to humans and the role of operators in the locale system is examined.
Journal ArticleDOI

Why there are complementary learning systems in the hippocampus and neocortex: insights from the successes and failures of connectionist models of learning and memory.

TL;DR: The account presented here suggests that memories are first stored via synaptic changes in the hippocampal system, that these changes support reinstatement of recent memories in the neocortex, that neocortical synapses change a little on each reinstatement, and that remote memory is based on accumulated neocorticals changes.
Journal ArticleDOI

The hippocampus as a cognitive map

R.E. Passingham
- 01 Jun 1979 - 
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Journal ArticleDOI

Place units in the hippocampus of the freely moving rat

TL;DR: The results suggest that place units were not responding to a simple sensory stimulus nor to a specific motor behavior, and are interpreted as strong support for the cognitive map theory of hippocampal function.
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