Independence of firing correlates of anatomically proximate hippocampal pyramidal cells.

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Abstract

In neocortex, neighboring neurons frequently exhibit correlated encoding properties. There is conflicting evidence whether a similar phenomenon occurs in hippocampus. To assess this quantitatively, a comparison was made of the spatial and temporal firing correlations within and between local groups of hippocampal cells, spaced 350-1400 microm apart. No evidence of clustering was found in a sample of >3000 neurons. Moreover, cells active in two environments were uniformly interspersed at a scale of <100 microm, as assessed by the activity-induced gene Arc. Independence of encoding characteristics implies uncorrelated inputs, which could enhance the capacity of the hippocampus to store arbitrary associations.

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Redish, A. D., Battaglia, F. P., Chawla, M. K., Ekstrom, A. D., Gerrard, J. L., Lipa, P., … Barnes, C. A. (2001). Independence of firing correlates of anatomically proximate hippocampal pyramidal cells. The Journal of Neuroscience : The Official Journal of the Society for Neuroscience, 21(5). https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.21-05-j0004.2001

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