Prefrontal cortical activity predicts the occurrence of nonlocal hippocampal representations during spatial navigation
Description
The receptive field of a neuron describes the regions of a stimulus space where the neuron is consistently active. Sparse spiking outside of the receptive field is often considered to be noise, rather than a reflection of information processing. Whether this characterization is accurate remains unclear. We therefore contrasted the sparse, temporally isolated spiking of hippocampal CA1 place cells to the consistent, temporally adjacent spiking seen within their spatial receptive fields ("place fields"). We found that isolated spikes, which occur during locomotion, are strongly phase coupled to hippocampal theta oscillations and transiently express coherent nonlocal spatial representations. Further, prefrontal cortical activity is coordinated with and can predict the occurrence of future isolated spiking events. Rather than local noise within the hippocampus, sparse, isolated place cell spiking reflects a coordinated cortical–hippocampal process consistent with the generation of nonlocal scenario representations during active navigation.
Data availability
Data used for this manuscript can be accessed at https://crcns.org/data-sets/hc/hc-13/about-hc-13 and in the Supporting Information.
Files
journal.pbio.3001393.pdf
Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1371/journal.pbio.3001393
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:5914
Funding
- Jane Coffin Childs Memorial Fund for Medical Research
- Jane Coffin Childs Memorial Fund for Biomedical Research postdoctoral fellowship
- Howard Hughes Medical Institute
- Kavli Institute for Fundamental Neuroscience
- University of California
- Office of the President Lab Fees Award