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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 85 No. 1 January 2001, pp. 105-116
Copyright ©2001 by the American Physiological Society
1Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy, W. M. Keck Center for the Neurobiology of Learning and Memory, University of Texas-Houston Medical School, Houston, Texas 77225; and 2Arizona Research Laboratories Division of Neural Systems, Memory, and Aging, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85724
Knierim, James J. and
Bruce L. McNaughton.
Hippocampal Place-Cell Firing During Movement in
Three-Dimensional Space. J. Neurophysiol. 85: 105-116, 2001. "Place" cells of the rat hippocampus are coupled to
"head direction" cells of the thalamus and limbic cortex. Head
direction cells are sensitive to head direction in the horizontal plane only, which leads to the question of whether place cells similarly encode locations in the horizontal plane only, ignoring the
z axis, or whether they encode locations in three
dimensions. This question was addressed by recording from ensembles of
CA1 pyramidal cells while rats traversed a rectangular track that could
be tilted and rotated to different three-dimensional orientations.
Cells were analyzed to determine whether their firing was bound to the external, three-dimensional cues of the environment, to the
two-dimensional rectangular surface, or to some combination of these
cues. Tilting the track 45° generally provoked a partial remapping of
the rectangular surface in that some cells maintained their place
fields, whereas other cells either gained new place fields, lost
existing fields, or changed their firing locations arbitrarily. When
the tilted track was rotated relative to the distal landmarks, most
place fields remapped, but a number of cells maintained the same place field relative to the x-y coordinate frame of the
laboratory, ignoring the z axis. No more cells were bound to
the local reference frame of the recording apparatus than would be
predicted by chance. The partial remapping demonstrated that the place
cell system was sensitive to the three-dimensional manipulations of the
recording apparatus. Nonetheless the results were not consistent with
an explicit three-dimensional tuning of individual hippocampal neurons nor were they consistent with a model in which different sets of cells
are tightly coupled to different sets of environmental cues. The
results are most consistent with the statement that hippocampal neurons
can change their "tuning functions" in arbitrary ways when features
of the sensory input or behavioral context are altered. Understanding
the rules that govern the remapping phenomenon holds promise for
deciphering the neural circuitry underlying hippocampal function.
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