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The Connected Hippocampus

  • 1st Edition, Volume 219 - June 4, 2015
  • Latest edition
  • Editors: Shane O'Mara, Marian Tsanov
  • Language: English

This volume of Progress in Brain Research focuses on the Connected Hippoc… Read more

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Description

This volume of Progress in Brain Research focuses on the Connected Hippocampus.

Key features

  • This well-established international series examines major areas of basic and clinical research within neuroscience, as well as emerging subfields

Readership

Neuroscientists, psychologists, neurologists

Table of contents

  1. If I had a Million Neurons: Potential Tests of Cortico-Hippocampal Theories
  2. Michael E. Hasselmo

  3. Diluted Connectivity in Pattern Association Networks Facilitates the Recall of Information from the Hippocampus to the Neocortex
  4. Edmund T. Rolls

  5. Cortico-hippocampal Systems Involved in Memory and Cognition: The PMAT Framework
  6. Maureen Ritchey, Laura A. Libby and Charan Ranganath

  7. The Subiculum: the Heart of the Extended Hippocampal System
  8. John P. Aggleton and Kat Christiansen

  9. The Neural Correlates of Navigation Beyond the Hippocampus
  10. Julie R. Dumont and Jeffrey S. Taube

  11. Septo-hippocampal Signal Processing: Breaking the Code
  12. Marian Tsanov

  13. Major Diencephalic Inputs to the Hippocampus: Supramammillary Nucleus and Nucleus Reuniens. Circuitry and Function
  14. Robert P. Vertes

  15. Importance of the Ventral Midline Thalamus in Driving Hippocampal Functions
  16. Jean-Christophe Cassel and Anne Pereira de Vasconcelos

  17. The Mammillary Bodies and Memory: More than a Hippocampal Relay
  18. Seralynne D. Vann and Andrew J. D. Nelson

  19. Modulating the Map: Dopaminergic Tuning of Hippocampal Spatial Coding and Interactions
  20. Emilie Werlen and Matthew W. Jones

  21. Integrative Hippocampal and Decision-making Neurocircuitry During Goal-relevant Predictions and Encoding
  22. Sheri J. Y. Mizumori and Valerie L. Tryon

Product details

  • Edition: 1
  • Latest edition
  • Volume: 219
  • Published: June 11, 2015
  • Language: English

About the editors

SO

Shane O'Mara

Shane O’Mara is Professor of Experimental Brain Research (Personal Chair) at Trinity College, Dublin - the University of Dublin. He is a Principal Investigator in, formerly Director of, the Trinity College Institute of Neuroscience, one of Europe’s leading research centres for neuroscience. He is also a Wellcome Trust Senior Investigator and a Science Foundation Ireland Principal Investigator. His research explores the brain systems supporting learning, memory, and cognition, and also the brain systems affected by stress and depression. He also explores the intersection of psychology and neuroscience with public policy, evidence-based policy-making and related areas. He has published about 130 peer-reviewed papers on these topics. His books include 'Why Torture Doesn’t Work: The Neuroscience of Interrogation' (Harvard University Press; 2015); 'A Brain for Business – A Brain for Life' (Palgrave Macmillan) and 'In Praise of Walking' (Bodley Head, 2019). He is a graduate of the National University of Ireland - Galway (BA, MA), and of the University of Oxford (DPhil). He is an elected Fellow of the Association for Psychological Science (USA), and an elected Member of the Royal Irish Academy.
Affiliations and expertise
Professor, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland

MT

Marian Tsanov

Affiliations and expertise
Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland

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