Publication

Ripple-locked coactivity of stimulus-specific neurons and human associative memory.

Journal Paper/Review - Feb 16, 2024

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Citation
Kunz L, Staresina B, Reinacher P, Brandt A, Guth T, Schulze-Bonhage A, Jacobs J. Ripple-locked coactivity of stimulus-specific neurons and human associative memory. Nat Neurosci 2024; 27:587-599.
Type
Journal Paper/Review (English)
Journal
Nat Neurosci 2024; 27
Publication Date
Feb 16, 2024
Issn Electronic
1546-1726
Pages
587-599
Brief description/objective

Associative memory enables the encoding and retrieval of relations between different stimuli. To better understand its neural basis, we investigated whether associative memory involves temporally correlated spiking of medial temporal lobe (MTL) neurons that exhibit stimulus-specific tuning. Using single-neuron recordings from patients with epilepsy performing an associative object-location memory task, we identified the object-specific and place-specific neurons that represented the separate elements of each memory. When patients encoded and retrieved particular memories, the relevant object-specific and place-specific neurons activated together during hippocampal ripples. This ripple-locked coactivity of stimulus-specific neurons emerged over time as the patients' associative learning progressed. Between encoding and retrieval, the ripple-locked timing of coactivity shifted, suggesting flexibility in the interaction between MTL neurons and hippocampal ripples according to behavioral demands. Our results are consistent with a cellular account of associative memory, in which hippocampal ripples coordinate the activity of specialized cellular populations to facilitate links between stimuli.