Back to Search
Start Over
Representational specializations of the hippocampus in phylogenetic perspective
- Source :
- Neuroscience letters
- Publication Year :
- 2017
-
Abstract
- In a major evolutionary transition that occurred more than 520 million years ago, the earliest vertebrates adapted to a life of mobile, predatory foraging guided by distance receptors concentrated on their heads. Vision and olfaction served as the principal sensory systems for guiding their search for nutrients and safe haven. Among their neural innovations, these animals had a telencephalon that included a homologue of the hippocampus. Experiments on goldfish, turtles, lizards, rodents, macaque monkeys and humans have provided insight into the initial adaptive advantages provided by the hippocampus homologue. These findings indicate that it housed specialized map-like representations of odors and sights encountered at various locations in an animal’s home range, including the order and timing in which they should be encountered during a journey. Once these representations emerged in early vertebrates, they also enabled a variety of behaviors beyond navigation. In modern rodents and primates, for example, the specialized representations of the hippocampus enable the learning and performance of tasks involving serial order, timing, recency, relations, sequences of events and behavioral contexts. During primate evolution, certain aspects of these representations gained particular prominence, in part due to the advent of foveal vision in haplorhines. As anthropoid primates—the ancestors of monkeys, apes and humans—changed from small animals that foraged locally into large ones with an extensive home range, they made foraging choices at a distance based on visual scenes. Experimental evidence shows that the hippocampus of monkeys specializes in memories that reflect the representation of such scenes, rather than spatial processing in a general sense. Furthermore, and contrary to the idea that the hippocampus functions in memory to the exclusion of perception, brain imaging studies and lesion effects in humans show that its specialized representations support both the perception and memory of scenes and sequences.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
genetic structures
media_common.quotation_subject
Foraging
BF
Hippocampus
Sensory system
Olfaction
Macaque
Article
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Anthropoid
Foveal
Memory
Perception
biology.animal
Animals
Humans
Phylogeny
media_common
Cognitive science
Scene memory
biology
General Neuroscience
Perspective (graphical)
Navigation
Representation
030104 developmental biology
Space Perception
RC0321
Visual Perception
Psychology
Neuroscience
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
Spatial Navigation
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 18727972 and 03043940
- Volume :
- 680
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Neuroscience letters
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....074ddb59bbd2cc79bf5c22d0b3df28d5