Flexible modulation of sequence generation in the entorhinal-hippocampal system.

Journal: Nature neuroscience
PMID:

Abstract

Exploration, consolidation and planning depend on the generation of sequential state representations. However, these algorithms require disparate forms of sampling dynamics for optimal performance. We theorize how the brain should adapt internally generated sequences for particular cognitive functions and propose a neural mechanism by which this may be accomplished within the entorhinal-hippocampal circuit. Specifically, we demonstrate that the systematic modulation along the medial entorhinal cortex dorsoventral axis of grid population input into the hippocampus facilitates a flexible generative process that can interpolate between qualitatively distinct regimes of sequential hippocampal reactivations. By relating the emergent hippocampal activity patterns drawn from our model to empirical data, we explain and reconcile a diversity of recently observed, but apparently unrelated, phenomena such as generative cycling, diffusive hippocampal reactivations and jumping trajectory events.

Authors

  • Daniel C McNamee
    Wellcome Centre for Human Neuroimaging, University College London, London, UK. daniel.c.mcnamee@gmail.com.
  • Kimberly L Stachenfeld
    Google DeepMind, London, UK.
  • Matthew M Botvinick
    Google DeepMind, London EC4A 3TW, UK.
  • Samuel J Gershman
    Department of Psychology and Center for Brain Science, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA. gershman@fas.harvard.edu horvitz@microsoft.com jbt@mit.edu.