McNaughton Neil, Ruan Ming, Woodnorth Mary-Anne
Department of Psychology, Neuroscience Research Centre, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Hippocampus. 2006;16(12):1102-10. doi: 10.1002/hipo.20235.
Neural activity often becomes rhythmic during mental processing. But there has been no direct proof that rhythmicity, per se, is important for mental function. We assessed this issue in relation to the contribution of hippocampal theta-frequency rhythmicity to learning in the Morris water maze by blocking theta (and other septal inputs to the hippocampus) and then using electrical stimulation to restore rhythmicity. We injected tetracaine into the medial septal area, and so blocked septal input to the hippocampus in rats throughout 16 consecutive trials in a Morris water maze. Rats with no hippocampal theta also showed no initial learning in the maze. Theta rhythmicity in the supramammillary area remained after septal blockade, and we used this to trigger electrical stimulation of the fornix superior. This substantially restored hippocampal theta-like rhythmicity throughout training at a normal frequency but with abnormal wave forms. This treatment applied throughout training substantially restored initial learning. Fixed frequency (7.7 Hz) stimulation produced rhythmic activity and a brief improvement in learning. Irregular stimulation with an average frequency of 7.7 Hz produced little rhythmicity and little improvement in learning. These results demonstrate that brain rhythmicity, per se, can be important for mental processing even when the detailed information originally carried by neurons is lost and when the reinstated pattern of population firing is not normal. The results suggest that the precise frequency of rhythmicity may be important for hippocampal function. Functional rhythmicity needs, therefore, to be included in neural models of cognitive processing. The success of our procedure also suggests that simple alterations of rhythmicity could be used to ameliorate deficits in learning and memory. (c) 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
在心理加工过程中,神经活动常常会变得有节律。但一直没有直接证据表明节律本身对心理功能很重要。我们通过阻断海马体的θ波频率节律(以及其他来自隔区到海马体的输入),然后利用电刺激恢复节律,来评估这一问题与海马体θ波频率节律对莫里斯水迷宫学习的贡献之间的关系。我们将丁卡因注射到内侧隔区,从而在大鼠进行莫里斯水迷宫的连续16次试验过程中阻断隔区对海马体的输入。没有海马体θ波的大鼠在迷宫中也没有表现出初始学习能力。隔区阻断后,乳头体上区的θ波节律依然存在,我们利用这一点触发对穹窿上部的电刺激。这在整个训练过程中以正常频率但异常波形基本恢复了类似海马体θ波的节律。在整个训练过程中应用这种处理方法基本恢复了初始学习能力。固定频率(7.7赫兹)刺激产生了节律性活动并使学习有短暂改善。平均频率为7.7赫兹的不规则刺激几乎没有产生节律性,对学习也几乎没有改善。这些结果表明,即使神经元最初携带的详细信息丢失,并且恢复的群体放电模式不正常,脑节律本身对心理加工也可能很重要。结果表明,节律的精确频率可能对海马体功能很重要。因此,功能性节律需要纳入认知加工的神经模型中。我们方法的成功还表明,节律的简单改变可用于改善学习和记忆缺陷。(c)2006威利 - 利斯公司