2015
DOI: 10.1038/npp.2015.13
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Hippocampal–Dorsolateral Prefrontal Coupling as a Species-Conserved Cognitive Mechanism: A Human Translational Imaging Study

Abstract: Hippocampal-prefrontal cortex (HC-PFC) interactions are implicated in working memory (WM) and altered in psychiatric conditions with cognitive impairment such as schizophrenia. While coupling between both structures is crucial for WM performance in rodents, evidence from human studies is conflicting and translation of findings is complicated by the use of differing paradigms across species. We therefore used functional magnetic resonance imaging together with a spatial WM paradigm adapted from rodent research … Show more

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Cited by 50 publications
(42 citation statements)
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“…This study adds to a growing literature on reverse translation-that is, attempts to create human tests homologous with animal tests to identify species conserved mechanisms likely implicated in disease. For example, the human virtual Morris water maze task was very helpful in extending to humans animal research demonstrating the pivotal role of hippocampal theta in spatial navigation (22), and a human radial arm maze task was recently used to confirm hippocampal-dorsolateral prefrontal cortex coupling as a speciesconserved cognitive mechanism (23). Similarly, translation of animal studies on fear conditioning to human research and using fear-potentiated startle as a translational outcome measure greatly advanced understanding of anxiety disorders (24,25).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This study adds to a growing literature on reverse translation-that is, attempts to create human tests homologous with animal tests to identify species conserved mechanisms likely implicated in disease. For example, the human virtual Morris water maze task was very helpful in extending to humans animal research demonstrating the pivotal role of hippocampal theta in spatial navigation (22), and a human radial arm maze task was recently used to confirm hippocampal-dorsolateral prefrontal cortex coupling as a speciesconserved cognitive mechanism (23). Similarly, translation of animal studies on fear conditioning to human research and using fear-potentiated startle as a translational outcome measure greatly advanced understanding of anxiety disorders (24,25).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In humans, interactions between the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex have been implicated during successful working memory performance (Sigurdsson & Duvarci, 2015), particularly in tasks that depend on prior information from previous trials. For example, in a spatial working memory paradigm where participants collected rewards in a radial maze, there were greater HPC-PFC interactions when participants had to actively maintain which spatial locations they had previously visited (Bähner et al, 2015). Similarly, the ability to hold items in working memory for extended periods of time relies not only on the prefrontal cortex but also the hippocampus (Dudukovic, Preston, Archie, Glover, & Wagner, 2011; Lewis-Peacock & Postle, 2008; Olsen et al, 2009), a process thought to rely on prospective memory to retrieve stored representations of the items.…”
Section: Neural Systems Underlying the Integration Of Prior Experimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In primates, evidence points to learning-related hippocampal-PFC interactions during working memory (Bähner et al, 2015) and declarative memory (Brincat & Miller, 2015), while psychiatric disorders, including schizophrenia, post-traumatic stress disorder, and depression are associated with disrupted PFC-hippocampal connectivity (Godsil et al, 2013). A benefit to investigating functional connectivity is the ability to corroborate non-invasive primate work with more invasive techniques in experimental animal models, e.g., phase locking and coherence analysis (Sigurdsson & Duvarci, 2016).…”
Section: Future Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%