# Using a specialized behavior to study the neural mechanisms of episodic memory

> **NIH NIH DP2** · COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY HEALTH SCIENCES · 2020 · $2,430,000

## Abstract

Project summary
 Throughout the day, the brain captures snapshots of distinct, instantaneous experiences, forming episodic
memories that often last a lifetime. These types of single-shot memories require the hippocampus and the
entorhinal cortex – a circuit collectively called the hippocampal formation. Disruptions of this brain region are
involved in several devastating memory disorders, including Alzheimer’s disease. In spite of extensive study, we
still lack basic understanding of how activity in the hippocampus implements memory functions.
 Neuroscience has amassed impressive knowledge about neural firing patterns in the hippocampal formation,
including those of place cells and grid cells. Yet, these cells are best understood in static conditions, once an
animal has learned an environment and has been extensively trained on a behavioral task. We lack a clear
connection between hippocampal activity and dynamic processes of memory formation and recall. How does
hippocampal activity change when a new memory is formed? How are these firing patterns interpreted by other
brain regions when a memory is recalled? These questions are challenging to address because the hippocampal
formation is anatomically extremely complex, and because episodic memory-guided behaviors are particularly
difficult to study in standard laboratory model organisms.
 In this project, we seek to overcome major challenges to hippocampal research by using a unique model
organism that is an extreme memory specialist – the chickadee. These birds cache thousands of food items at
scattered, hidden locations in their environment and use memory to retrieve their caches later in time. Their
behavior is readily produced in the lab and contains well-defined moments of memory formation (caching) and
recall (cache retrieval). The repeatable and streamlined structure of food caching provides an opportunity to
study neural activity underlying these memory processes. Cache memory requires the avian hippocampal
formation, which is embryologically homologous to its mammalian counterpart and shares similar circuit
organization. However, the avian hippocampus is anatomically simpler and has a small number of well-defined,
compact, and thus easily targetable inputs and outputs.
 The proposed project will obtain recordings of the hippocampus while chickadees are actively caching and
retrieving food. This will allow us to relate hippocampal activity to discrete memory processes and to obtain an
interpretable neural signature of episodic memories. By leveraging chickadee anatomy, this project will also
determine what information is conveyed by hippocampal outputs to identified targets in the brain during memory
recall. The ultimate goal is to obtain a complete circuit-level understanding of episodic memory. Because of the
close correspondence between our system and the mammalian hippocampus, these findings will inform other
fields and will generalize to hippocampal systems in other organisms that us...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10002460
- **Project number:** 1DP2AG071918-01
- **Recipient organization:** COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY HEALTH SCIENCES
- **Principal Investigator:** Dmitriy Aronov
- **Activity code:** DP2 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2020
- **Award amount:** $2,430,000
- **Award type:** 1
- **Project period:** 2020-09-15 → 2025-03-31

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10002460

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10002460, Using a specialized behavior to study the neural mechanisms of episodic memory (1DP2AG071918-01). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-26 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10002460. Licensed CC0.

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