Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychology, Vanderbilt Vision Research Center, Vanderbilt Brain Institute, Vanderbilt University
2. Department of Biology, Center for Vision Research, York University
Abstract
Nested hippocampal oscillations in the rodent give rise to temporal dynamics that may underlie learning, memory, and decision making. Although theta/gamma coupling in rodent CA1 occurs during exploration and sharp-wave ripples emerge in quiescence, it is less clear that these oscillatory regimes extend to primates. We therefore sought to identify correspondences in frequency bands, nesting, and behavioral coupling of oscillations taken from macaque hippocampus. We found that, in contrast to rodent oscillations, theta and gamma frequency bands in macaque CA1 were segregated by behavioral states. In both stationary and freely moving designs, beta2/gamma (15–70 Hz) had greater power during visual search whereas the theta band (3–10 Hz; peak ~8 Hz) dominated during quiescence and early sleep. Moreover, theta-band amplitude was strongest when beta2/slow gamma (20–35 Hz) amplitude was weakest, instead occurring along with higher frequencies (60–150 Hz). Spike-field coherence was most frequently seen in these three bands (3–10 Hz, 20–35 Hz, and 60–150 Hz); however, the theta-band coherence was largely due to spurious coupling during sharp-wave ripples. Accordingly, no intrinsic theta spiking rhythmicity was apparent. These results support a role for beta2/slow gamma modulation in CA1 during active exploration in the primate that is decoupled from theta oscillations. The apparent difference to the rodent oscillatory canon calls for a shift in focus of frequency when considering the primate hippocampus.
Funder
National Institutes of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
Whitehall Foundation
Alzheimer's Society of Canada Doctoral Award
National Science and Engineering Research Council
NSERC CREATE Vision Science and Applications
Brain Canada Multi-Investigator Research Initiative
The Krembil Foundation
National Eye Institute
Publisher
eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd
Subject
General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience
Cited by
11 articles.
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