Search results for "dentate spike"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Dentate spikes and learning : disrupting hippocampal function during memory consolidation can improve pattern separation

2018

Hippocampal dentate spikes (DSs) are short-duration, large-amplitude fluctuations in hilar local field potentials and take place while resting and sleeping. During DSs, dentate gyrus granule cells increase firing while CA1 pyramidal cells decrease firing. Recent findings suggest DSs play a significant role in memory consolidation after training on a hippocampus-dependent, nonspatial associative learning task. Here, we aimed to find out whether DSs are important in other types of hippocampus-dependent learning tasks as well. To this end, we trained adult male Sprague-Dawley rats in a spatial reference memory task, a fixed interval task, and a pattern separation task. During a rest period im…

MaleTime FactorsPattern separationoppiminenPhysiologyComputer sciencehippocampusAction PotentialsHippocampusIMPAIRSContext (language use)ta3112050105 experimental psychology3124 Neurology and psychiatryTask (project management)Rats Sprague-Dawley03 medical and health sciencesDiscrimination Psychological0302 clinical medicineRIPPLESdentate spikeAnimals0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesRelevance (information retrieval)hippokampusMaze Learningta515Spatial Memorymuisti (kognitio)NeuronslearningGeneral Neuroscience05 social sciencesAssociation LearningHippocampal functionELECTRICAL-STIMULATIONElectric Stimulationmemory consolidationCONTEXTDentate GyrusMemory consolidationNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgery
researchProduct

Hippocampal electrical stimulation disrupts associative learning when targeted at dentate spikes

2017

Hippocampal electrophysiological oscillations, namely theta and ripples, have been implicated in encoding and consolidation of new memories, respectively. According to existing literature, hippocampal dentate spikes are prominent, short‐duration (<30 ms), large‐amplitude (∼2–4 mV) fluctuations in hilar local‐field potentials that take place during awake immobility and sleep. Interestingly, previous studies indicate that during dentate spikes dentate gyrus granule cells increase their firing while firing of CA1 pyramidal cells are suppressed, thus resulting in momentary uncoupling of the two hippocampal subregions. To date, the behavioural significance of dentate spikes is unknown. Here, to …

dentate spikesnervous systemhippocampal electrical stimulationhippokampusassociative learning
researchProduct