| Literature DB >> 32070475 |
Igor Gridchyn1, Philipp Schoenenberger1, Joseph O'Neill1, Jozsef Csicsvari2.
Abstract
Memory consolidation is thought to depend on the reactivation of waking hippocampal firing patterns during sleep. Following goal learning, the reactivation of place cell firing can represent goals and predicts subsequent memory recall. However, it is unclear whether reactivation promotes the recall of the reactivated memories only or triggers wider reorganization. We trained animals to locate goals at fixed locations in two different environments. Following learning, by performing online assembly content decoding, the reactivation of only one environment was disrupted, leading to recall deficit in that environment. The place map of the disrupted environment was destabilized but re-emerged once the goal was relearned. These data demonstrate that sleep reactivation facilitates goal-memory retrieval by strengthening memories that enable the selection of context-specific hippocampal maps. However, sleep reactivation may not be needed for the stabilization of place maps considering that the map of the disrupted environment re-emerged after the retraining of goals.Entities:
Keywords: brain-machine interface; consolidation; decoding; hippocampus; optogenetics; reactivation; remapping; replay; sleep; spatial learning
Year: 2020 PMID: 32070475 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2020.01.021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuron ISSN: 0896-6273 Impact factor: 17.173