Login / Signup

Hippocampal neurons code individual episodic memories in humans.

Luca D KolibiusFrederic RouxGeorge ParishMarije J Ter WalMircea van der PlasRamesh ChelvarajahVijay SawlaniDavid T RollingsJohannes D LangStephanie GollwitzerKatrin WaltherRüdiger HopfengärtnerGernot KreiselmeyerHajo HamerBernhard P StaresinaMaria WimberHoward BowmanSimon Hanslmayr
Published in: Nature human behaviour (2023)
The hippocampus is an essential hub for episodic memory processing. However, how human hippocampal single neurons code multi-element associations remains unknown. In particular, it is debated whether each hippocampal neuron represents an invariant element within an episode or whether single neurons bind together all the elements of a discrete episodic memory. Here we provide evidence for the latter hypothesis. Using single-neuron recordings from a total of 30 participants, we show that individual neurons, which we term episode-specific neurons, code discrete episodic memories using either a rate code or a temporal firing code. These neurons were observed exclusively in the hippocampus. Importantly, these episode-specific neurons do not reflect the coding of a particular element in the episode (that is, concept or time). Instead, they code for the conjunction of the different elements that make up the episode.
Keyphrases
  • spinal cord
  • endothelial cells
  • working memory
  • blood brain barrier
  • induced pluripotent stem cells
  • temporal lobe epilepsy