Using the Change Manager Model for the Hippocampal System to Predict Connectivity and Neurophysiological Parameters in the Perirhinal Cortex
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Coward, L Andrew
Gedeon, Tamas (Tom)
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Hindawi Publishing Corporation
Abstract
Theoretical arguments demonstrate that practical considerations, including the needs to limit physiological resources and to learn
without interference with prior learning, severely constrain the anatomical architecture of the brain. These arguments identify the
hippocampal system as the change manager for the cortex, with the role of selecting the most appropriate locations for cortical
receptive field changes at each point in time and driving those changes.This role results in the hippocampal system recording the
identities of groups of cortical receptive fields that changed at the same time. These types of records can also be used to reactivate the
receptive fields active during individual unique past events, providing mechanisms for episodic memory retrieval. Our theoretical
arguments identify the perirhinal cortex as one important focal point both for driving changes and for recording and retrieving
episodic memories.The retrieval of episodic memories must not drive unnecessary receptive field changes, and this consideration
places strong constraints on neuron properties and connectivity within and between the perirhinal cortex and regular cortex.Hence
the model predicts a number of such properties and connectivity. Experimental test of these falsifiable predictions would clarify
how change is managed in the cortex and how episodic memories are retrieved.
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Computational Intelligence and Neuroscience
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