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Publication : Precisely timed theta oscillations are selectively required during the encoding phase of memory.

First Author  Quirk CR Year  2021
Journal  Nat Neurosci Volume  24
Issue  11 Pages  1614-1627
PubMed ID  34608335 Mgi Jnum  J:323968
Mgi Id  MGI:7263130 Doi  10.1038/s41593-021-00919-0
Citation  Quirk CR, et al. (2021) Precisely timed theta oscillations are selectively required during the encoding phase of memory. Nat Neurosci 24(11):1614-1627
abstractText  Brain oscillations have been hypothesized to support cognitive function by coordinating spike timing within and across brain regions, yet it is often not known when timing is either critical for neural computations or an epiphenomenon. The entorhinal cortex and hippocampus are necessary for learning and memory and exhibit prominent theta oscillations (6-9 Hz), which are controlled by pacemaker cells in the medial septal area. Here we show that entorhinal and hippocampal neuronal activity patterns were strongly entrained by rhythmic optical stimulation of parvalbumin-positive medial septal area neurons in mice. Despite strong entrainment, memory impairments in a spatial working memory task were not observed with pacing frequencies at or below the endogenous theta frequency and only emerged at frequencies >/=10 Hz, and specifically when pacing was targeted to maze segments where encoding occurs. Neural computations during the encoding phase were therefore selectively disrupted by perturbations of the timing of neuronal firing patterns.
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