Literature DB >> 23915126

The hippocampus, time, and memory across scales.

Marc W Howard1, Howard Eichenbaum.   

Abstract

A wealth of experimental studies with animals have offered insights about how neural networks within the hippocampus support the temporal organization of memories. These studies have revealed the existence of "time cells" that encode moments in time, much as the well-known "place cells" map locations in space. Another line of work inspired by human behavioral studies suggests that episodic memories are mediated by a state of temporal context that changes gradually over long time scales, up to at least a few thousand seconds. In this view, the "mental time travel" hypothesized to support the experience of episodic memory corresponds to a "jump back in time" in which a previous state of temporal context is recovered. We suggest that these 2 sets of findings could be different facets of a representation of temporal history that maintains a record at the last few thousand seconds of experience. The ability to represent long time scales comes at the cost of discarding precise information about when a stimulus was experienced--this uncertainty becomes greater for events further in the past. We review recent computational work that describes a mechanism that could construct such a scale-invariant representation. Taken as a whole, this suggests the hippocampus plays its role in multiple aspects of cognition by representing events embedded in a general spatiotemporal context. The representation of internal time can be useful across nonhippocampal memory systems. PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2013 APA, all rights reserved.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23915126      PMCID: PMC3982793          DOI: 10.1037/a0033621

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Psychol Gen        ISSN: 0022-1015


  114 in total

1.  Inter-trial neuronal activity in inferior temporal cortex: a putative vehicle to generate long-term visual associations.

Authors:  V Yakovlev; S Fusi; E Berman; E Zohary
Journal:  Nat Neurosci       Date:  1998-08       Impact factor: 24.884

2.  Prediction of immediate and future rewards differentially recruits cortico-basal ganglia loops.

Authors:  Saori C Tanaka; Kenji Doya; Go Okada; Kazutaka Ueda; Yasumasa Okamoto; Shigeto Yamawaki
Journal:  Nat Neurosci       Date:  2004-07-04       Impact factor: 24.884

3.  Binding of multidimensional context information as a distinctive characteristic of remember judgments.

Authors:  Thorsten Meiser; Christine Sattler; Kerstin Weisser
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn       Date:  2008-01       Impact factor: 3.051

4.  Geometric determinants of the place fields of hippocampal neurons.

Authors:  J O'Keefe; N Burgess
Journal:  Nature       Date:  1996-05-30       Impact factor: 49.962

5.  Using state-trace analysis to dissociate the functions of the human hippocampus and perirhinal cortex in recognition memory.

Authors:  Bernhard P Staresina; Juergen Fell; John C Dunn; Nikolai Axmacher; Richard N Henson
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2013-02-04       Impact factor: 11.205

6.  Evidence for discrete-state processing in recognition memory.

Authors:  Jordan M Province; Jeffrey N Rouder
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2012-08-20       Impact factor: 11.205

7.  Some-or-none recollection: Evidence from item and source memory.

Authors:  Serge V Onyper; Yaofei X Zhang; Marc W Howard
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Gen       Date:  2010-05

8.  Hippocampal "time cells" bridge the gap in memory for discontiguous events.

Authors:  Christopher J MacDonald; Kyle Q Lepage; Uri T Eden; Howard Eichenbaum
Journal:  Neuron       Date:  2011-08-25       Impact factor: 17.173

9.  The hippocampus and disambiguation of overlapping sequences.

Authors:  Kara L Agster; Norbert J Fortin; Howard Eichenbaum
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2002-07-01       Impact factor: 6.167

10.  Temporal maps and informativeness in associative learning.

Authors:  Peter D Balsam; C Randy Gallistel
Journal:  Trends Neurosci       Date:  2009-01-10       Impact factor: 13.837

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  50 in total

Review 1.  Episodic Memory and Beyond: The Hippocampus and Neocortex in Transformation.

Authors:  Morris Moscovitch; Roberto Cabeza; Gordon Winocur; Lynn Nadel
Journal:  Annu Rev Psychol       Date:  2016       Impact factor: 24.137

2.  K-Lysine acetyltransferase 2a regulates a hippocampal gene expression network linked to memory formation.

Authors:  Roman M Stilling; Raik Rönicke; Eva Benito; Hendrik Urbanke; Vincenzo Capece; Susanne Burkhardt; Sanaz Bahari-Javan; Jonas Barth; Farahnaz Sananbenesi; Anna L Schütz; Jerzy Dyczkowski; Ana Martinez-Hernandez; Cemil Kerimoglu; Sharon Y R Dent; Stefan Bonn; Klaus G Reymann; Andre Fischer
Journal:  EMBO J       Date:  2014-07-14       Impact factor: 11.598

Review 3.  Time cells in the hippocampus: a new dimension for mapping memories.

Authors:  Howard Eichenbaum
Journal:  Nat Rev Neurosci       Date:  2014-10-01       Impact factor: 34.870

4.  Optic flow instructs retinotopic map formation through a spatial to temporal to spatial transformation of visual information.

Authors:  Masaki Hiramoto; Hollis T Cline
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2014-11-10       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Focusing on what matters: Modulation of the human hippocampus by relational attention.

Authors:  Natalia I Córdova; Nicholas B Turk-Browne; Mariam Aly
Journal:  Hippocampus       Date:  2019-02-19       Impact factor: 3.899

6.  In a Temporally Segmented Experience Hippocampal Neurons Represent Temporally Drifting Context But Not Discrete Segments.

Authors:  John H Bladon; Daniel Joseph Sheehan; Camila S De Freitas; Marc W Howard
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2019-06-28       Impact factor: 6.167

7.  Timing a week later: The role of long-term memory in temporal preparation.

Authors:  Rozemarijn M Mattiesing; Wouter Kruijne; Martijn Meeter; Sander A Los
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2017-12

8.  Hippocampal activity patterns carry information about objects in temporal context.

Authors:  Liang-Tien Hsieh; Matthias J Gruber; Lucas J Jenkins; Charan Ranganath
Journal:  Neuron       Date:  2014-03-05       Impact factor: 17.173

9.  A unified mathematical framework for coding time, space, and sequences in the hippocampal region.

Authors:  Marc W Howard; Christopher J MacDonald; Zoran Tiganj; Karthik H Shankar; Qian Du; Michael E Hasselmo; Howard Eichenbaum
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2014-03-26       Impact factor: 6.167

10.  Attention Stabilizes Representations in the Human Hippocampus.

Authors:  Mariam Aly; Nicholas B Turk-Browne
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2015-03-12       Impact factor: 5.357

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