Division of Cognitive Neurobiology, Centre for Brain Research, Medical University Vienna, Spitalgasse 4, 1090, Vienna, Austria.
Division of Neurophysiology and Neuropharmacology, Centre for Physiology and Pharmacology, Medical University Vienna, Schwarzspanierstrasse 17, 1090, Vienna, Austria.
Brain Struct Funct. 2018 Sep;223(7):3183-3211. doi: 10.1007/s00429-018-1681-6. Epub 2018 May 22.
The ability to recognize novel situations is among the most fascinating and vital of the brain functions. A hypothesis posits that encoding of novelty is prompted by failures in expectancy, according to computation matching incoming information with stored events. Thus, unexpected changes in context are detected within the hippocampus and transferred to downstream structures, eliciting the arousal of the dopamine system. Nevertheless, the precise locus of detection is a matter of debate. The dorsal CA1 hippocampus (dCA1) appears as an ideal candidate for operating a mismatch computation and discriminating the occurrence of diverse stimuli within the same environment. In this study, we sought to determine dCA1 neuronal firing during the experience of novel stimuli embedded in familiar contexts. We performed population recordings while head-fixed mice navigated virtual environments. Three stimuli were employed, namely a novel pattern of visual cues, an odor, and a reward with enhanced valence. The encounter of unexpected events elicited profound variations in dCA1 that were assessed both as opposite rate directions and altered network connectivity. When experienced in sequence, novel stimuli elicited specific responses that often exhibited cross-sensitization. Short-latency, event-triggered responses were in accordance with the detection of novelty being computed within dCA1. We postulate that firing variations trigger neuronal disinhibition, and constitute a fundamental mechanism in the processing of unexpected events and in learning. Elucidating the mechanisms underlying detection and computation of novelty might help in understanding hippocampal-dependent cognitive dysfunctions associated with neuropathologies and psychiatric conditions.
识别新情况的能力是大脑功能中最迷人、最重要的能力之一。有一种假说认为,根据计算将传入的信息与存储的事件进行匹配,新颖性的编码是由期望失败引发的。因此,海马体内部会检测到上下文的意外变化,并将其转移到下游结构,从而引发多巴胺系统的唤醒。然而,确切的检测位置是一个有争议的问题。背侧 CA1 海马体(dCA1)似乎是进行不匹配计算并区分同一环境中不同刺激发生的理想候选者。在这项研究中,我们试图确定在熟悉环境中嵌入新刺激时 dCA1 神经元的放电情况。我们在头部固定的小鼠导航虚拟环境时进行了群体记录。使用了三种刺激,即新颖的视觉线索模式、气味和增强效价的奖励。意想不到的事件的发生引起了 dCA1 中深刻的变化,这些变化既可以评估为相反的速率方向,也可以评估为改变的网络连接。当按顺序经历新刺激时,新刺激会产生特定的反应,这些反应通常表现出交叉敏感化。潜伏期短、事件触发的反应与在 dCA1 内计算的新颖性检测一致。我们假设,放电变化会引发神经元去抑制,并构成处理意外事件和学习的基本机制。阐明检测和计算新颖性的机制可能有助于理解与神经病理学和精神疾病相关的海马体依赖性认知功能障碍。