Project Details
Dreaming in context – Role of context in sensory cortico-hippocampal interactions during consolidation (A09*)
Subject Area
Cognitive, Systems and Behavioural Neurobiology
Term
since 2022
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 327654276
In sleep, neural activity patterns associated with learned behaviours are reactivated, consolidating the fragile memory traces established during the day. The standard view is that reactivation begins in hippocampus and spreads to downstream higher order cortices. Compared to higher order cortical consolidation, little is known about memory consolidation in upstream sensory cortices. Here reactivation precedes, rather than follows, that in hippocampus, raising fundamental questions about the role of hippocampus in this consolidation. We hypothesize that sensory memory representation is influenced by hippocampus-dependent relational/spatial context. To test this hypothesis, we will use sounds to study learning-associated reactivation in primary auditory cortex and hippocampus and its effect on memory representation. Taking advantage of state-of-the-art high-density Neuropixels probes and optogenetics we will sample neural activity in all cortical layers and hippocampus of behaving and sleeping mice. The combination of these approaches will allow us to explore how reactivation and cortico-hippocampal interactions depend on acoustic (work package 1), spatial (WP2), and schema (WP3) contextual information, with the aim to better understand sensory consolidation, and its connection with neuronal representation.
DFG Programme
Collaborative Research Centres
Subproject of
SFB 1315:
Mechanisms and disturbances in memory consolidation: From synapses to systems
Applicant Institution
Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
Project Head
Livia de Hoz, Ph.D.