Date of Award
Spring 5-2-2022
Document Type
Thesis
Publication Status
Version of Record
Degree Name
Master of Science (MS)
Department
Biological Sciences
First Advisor
Yingxue Wang
Abstract
The hippocampus is central to the formation of episodic memories, or memories of personally-experienced events. Episodic memories, in turn, are crucial for navigation along familiar pathways as they can encode information about both external sensory events and internal understandings of position and behavior. The contributions of individual cells in the hippocampus to episodic memory formation and recall during navigation, however, are not well-understood. We recorded the activity of hippocampal CA1 neurons as mice were trained on a particular navigation task which required running a specified distance on a treadmill and then licking on a lick port. Using gradient-boosted decision trees, we classified the quality of behavior during the task and predicted the firing activity of recorded neurons as a function of sensory and self-motion information. Our findings indicate that most hippocampal neurons were primarily tuned to velocity and the distance run on the treadmill rather than external sensory cues.
Recommended Citation
Eagle, Aden, "FEATURE SELECTIVITY OF HIPPOCAMPAL CA1 NEURONS DURING MEMORY ENCODING" (2022). Honors Theses. 4.
https://digitalcommons.fau.edu/honors_theses/4