Representation of Objects in Space by Two Classes of Hippocampal Pyramidal Cells
Open Access
- 14 June 2004
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of general physiology
- Vol. 124 (1) , 9-25
- https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.200409015
Abstract
Humans can recognize and navigate in a room when its contents have been rearranged. Rats also adapt rapidly to movements of objects in a familiar environment. We therefore set out to investigate the neural machinery that underlies this capacity by further investigating the place cell–based map of the surroundings found in the rat hippocampus. We recorded from single CA1 pyramidal cells as rats foraged for food in a cylindrical arena (the room) containing a tall barrier (the furniture). Our main finding is a new class of cells that signal proximity to the barrier. If the barrier is fixed in position, these cells appear to be ordinary place cells. When, however, the barrier is moved, their activity moves equally and thereby conveys information about the barrier's position relative to the arena. When the barrier is removed, such cells stop firing, further suggesting they represent the barrier. Finally, if the barrier is put into a different arena where place cell activity is changed beyond recognition (“remapping”), these cells continue to discharge at the barrier. We also saw, in addition to barrier cells and place cells, a small number of cells whose activity seemed to require the barrier to be in a specific place in the environment. We conclude that barrier cells represent the location of the barrier in an environment-specific, place cell framework. The combined place + barrier cell activity thus mimics the current arrangement of the environment in an unexpectedly realistic fashion.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cellular networks underlying human spatial navigationNature, 2003
- Brain-state- and cell-type-specific firing of hippocampal interneurons in vivoNature, 2003
- Accumulation of Hippocampal Place Fields at the Goal Location in an Annular Watermaze TaskJournal of Neuroscience, 2001
- Modeling place fields in terms of the cortical inputs to the hippocampusHippocampus, 2000
- Conjoint Control of Hippocampal Place Cell Firing by Two Visual StimuliThe Journal of general physiology, 2000
- Abolition of Long-Term Stability of New Hippocampal Place Cell Maps by NMDA Receptor BlockadeScience, 1998
- Failure of Centrally Placed Objects to Control the Firing Fields of Hippocampal Place CellsJournal of Neuroscience, 1997
- Binding of hippocampal CA1 neural activity to multiple reference frames in a landmark-based navigation taskJournal of Neuroscience, 1996
- Experience‐dependent modifications of hippocampal place cell firingHippocampus, 1991
- First occurrence of hippocampal spatial firing in a new environmentExperimental Neurology, 1978