Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience (Dec 2013)

Donor/Recipient Enhancement of Memory in Rat Hippocampus

  • Sam A Deadwyler,
  • Robert E Hampson,
  • Andrew eSweat,
  • Dong eSong,
  • Rosa H.M. Chan,
  • Ioan eOpris,
  • Greg A Gerhardt,
  • Vasilis Z Marmarelis,
  • Theodore W Berger

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnsys.2013.00120
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7

Abstract

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The critical role of the mammalian hippocampus in the formation, translation and retrieval of memory has been documented over many decades. There are many theories of how the hippocampus operates to encode events and a precise mechanism was recently identified in rats performing a short-term memory task which demonstrated that successful information encoding was promoted via specific patterns of activity generated within ensembles of hippocampal neurons. In the study presented here these ‘representations’ were extracted via a customized nonlinear multi-input multi-output (MIMO) mathematical model which allowed prediction of successful performance on specific trials within the testing session. A unique feature of this characterization was demonstrated when successful information encoding patterns were derived online from well-trained donor animals during difficult long-delay trials and delivered via online electrical stimulation to synchronously tested naïve recipient animals never before exposed to the delay feature of the task. By transferring such model-derived trained (donor) animal hippocampal firing patterns via stimulation to coupled naïve recipient animals, their task performance was facilitated in a direct donor-recipient manner. This provides the basis for utilizing extracted appropriate neural information from one brain to induce, recover, or enhance memory related processing in the brain of another subject.

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