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Variable specificity of memory trace reactivation during hippocampal sharp wave ripples

Hippocampal sharp wave-ripples (SWR) are thought to mediate brain-wide reactivation of memory traces in service of memory consolidation. However, rather than the faithful replay of neural activity observed during a specific experience, reactivation in both the hippocampus and downstream regions is m...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Current opinion in behavioral sciences 2020-04, Vol.32, p.126-135
Main Authors: Swanson, Rachel A, Levenstein, Daniel, McClain, Kathryn, Tingley, David, Buzsáki, György
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Hippocampal sharp wave-ripples (SWR) are thought to mediate brain-wide reactivation of memory traces in service of memory consolidation. However, rather than the faithful replay of neural activity observed during a specific experience, reactivation in both the hippocampus and downstream regions is more variable. We suggest that variable reactivation is a unifying feature of recurrent brain circuits. In the hippocampus, self-organized activation during offline states is constrained by existing attractor manifolds, or maps, and may be biased toward particular mapped locations by salient experience, which results in the appearance of experience-specific replay. Similarly, the impact of SWR-associated reactivation on downstream regions is not a simple transfer of hippocampal representational content. Rather, the response of downstream regions depends on a transformation function, defined by both the feedforward and local circuit architecture, as well as the ‘listening state’ of the downstream region. We hypothesize that SWRs act as a multiplexed signal, the mnemonic specificity of which is largely determined by this transformation function, and discuss the implications of this framing for theories of systems consolidation.
ISSN:2352-1546
2352-1554
DOI:10.1016/j.cobeha.2020.02.008