Publication | Closed Access
Major Dissociation Between Medial and Lateral Entorhinal Input to Dorsal Hippocampus
688
Citations
21
References
2005
Year
Developmental Cognitive NeuroscienceNeural RecodingSynaptic TransmissionBrain MechanismNeurotransmissionBrain OrganizationSocial SciencesLateral Entorhinal InputNeural MechanismNeurodynamicsDorsal HippocampusNonspatial InformationMemoryCognitive NeuroscienceHippocampal Place CellsCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesCortical RemodelingSensorimotor IntegrationNervous SystemSynaptic PlasticityNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyNeuroscienceSpatial CognitionCentral Nervous SystemMedicineSpatial Information
Hippocampal place cells are a model system of how the brain constructs cognitive representations and of how these representations support complex behavior, learning, and memory. There is, however, a lack of detailed knowledge about the properties of hippocampal afferents. We recorded multiple single units from the hippocampus and the medial and lateral entorhinal areas of behaving rats. Although many medial entorhinal neurons had highly specific place fields, lateral entorhinal neurons displayed weak spatial specificity. This finding demonstrates a fundamental dissociation between the information conveyed to the hippocampus by its major input streams, with spatial information represented by the medial and nonspatial information represented by the lateral entorhinal cortex.
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