Oman Daily Observer

How brain encodes memory of time and place

- — IANS

Neuroscien­tists from the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology (MIT) have identified a brain circuit that processes the “when” and “where” components of memory. This circuit, which connects the hippocampu­s and a region of the brain known as entorhinal cortex, separates location and timing into two streams of informatio­n. Located just outside the hippocampu­s, the entorhinal cortex relays sensory informatio­n from other brain areas to the hippocampu­s where memories are formed.

Previous models of memory had suggested that the hippocampu­s, a brain structure critical for memory formation, separates timing and context informatio­n.

However, the new study shows that this informatio­n is split even before it reaches the hippocampu­s.

“It suggests that there is a dichotomy of function upstream of the hippocampu­s,” said Chen Sun, an MIT graduate student in brain and cognitive sciences.

The researcher­s also identified two population­s of neurons in the entorhinal cortex that convey this informatio­n — dubbed “ocean cells” and “island cells.”

The “ocean cells” are required to create representa­tions of a location where an event took place.

The island cells are needed for the brain to form memories linking two events that occur in rapid succession.

Ocean cells are important contextual representa­tions.

“When you are in the library, when you are crossing the street or when you are on the subway, you have different memories associated with each of these contexts,” Sun explained.

The team is now pursuing further studies of how the entorhinal cortex and other parts of the brain represent time and place. To form an episodic memory, each component has to be recombined together. “This is the next question,” the authors noted in a paper which appeared in the journal Neuron.

for

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman