Dictionary Definition
hippocampus
Noun
1 a complex neural structure (shaped like a sea
horse) consisting of gray matter and located on the floor of each
lateral ventricle; intimately involved in motivation and emotion as
part of the limbic system; has a central role in the formation of
memories
2 seahorses [syn: genus
Hippocampus] [also: hippocampi (pl)]
User Contributed Dictionary
see Hippocampus
English
Etymology
From hippocampus from ἱππόκαμπος from ἵππος and κάμπος.Noun
- A mythological creature with the front head and forelimbs of a horse, and the rear of a dolphin, a hippocamp.
- A part of the brain located inside the temporal lobe which consists mainly of grey matter. It is a component of the limbic system and plays a role in memory and emotion. So named because of its resemblance to the seahorse.
Derived terms
Translations
mythological creature
brain region
- Finnish: aivoturso
Latin
Alternative spellings
Noun
hippocampus, -ampi m- a seahorse
Extensive Definition
The hippocampus is a part of the forebrain, located in the
medial temporal
lobe. It belongs to the limbic
system and plays major roles in short
term memory and spatial navigation. Humans and other
mammals have two hippocampi, one in each side of the brain. In
rodents, where it has been studied most extensively, the
hippocampus is shaped something like a banana. In humans, it has a
curved and convoluted shape that reminded early anatomists of a
seahorse. The name, in fact, derives from the Greek word for
seahorse
(Greek:
hippos = horse, kampos = sea monster).
In Alzheimer's
disease, the hippocampus is one of the first regions of the
brain to suffer damage; memory problems and disorientation appear
among the first symptoms. Damage to the hippocampus can also result
from oxygen starvation (anoxia), encephalitis or mesial
temporal lobe epilepsy. People with extensive hippocampal damage
may experience amnesia,
that is, inability to form or retain new memories.
Functions of the hippocampus
Perhaps the earliest idea was that the
hippocampus is involved in olfaction: this seems to have been
suggested mainly by its location in the brain, next to the
olfactory cortex. There continues to be some interest in
hippocampal olfactory responses, but almost nobody now believes
that the primary function of the hippocampus is olfactory.
Over the years, three main ideas of hippocampal
function have dominated the literature: inhibition, memory, and
space. The behavioral inhibition theory (caricatured by O'Keefe and
Nadel as "step on the brakes!") was very popular up to the 1960s.
It derived much of its force from two observations: first, animals
with hippocampal damage tend to be hyperactive; second, animals
with hippocampal damage often have difficulty learning to inhibit
responses that they have previously been taught. Jeffrey Gray
developed this line of thought into a full-fledged theory of the
role of the hippocampus in anxiety. The inhibition theory is not,
however, very popular at present.
The second important line of thought relates the
hippocampus to memory. Although it had precursors, this idea
derived its main force from a very well-known report by Scoville
and Milner of the results of surgical destruction of the
hippocampus (in an attempt to relieve epileptic seizures), in a
patient known as H.M. The unexpected outcome was severe amnesia:
H.M. was unable to consciously remember events that occurred after
his surgery or for several years before it. This case occasioned
such enormous interest that H.M. is now said to be the most
intensively studied medical case in history. In the ensuing years,
other patients with similar levels of hippocampal damage and
amnesia (caused by accident or disease) have been studied as well,
and literally thousands of experiments have studied the physiology
of neural plasticity in the hippocampus. There is now almost
universal agreement that the hippocampus plays some sort of
important role in memory; however, the precise nature of this role
remains widely debated.
The third important line of thought relates the
hippocampus to space. The spatial theory was originally championed
by O'Keefe and Nadel, who were influenced by E. C.
Tolman's theories about "cognitive maps" in humans and animals.
O'Keefe and his student Dostrovsky discovered, in 1971, neurons in
the rat hippocampus that appeared to them to show activity that
encoded the rat's location within its environment. O'Keefe and his
co-workers, especially Lynn Nadel, continued to investigate this
question, in a line of work that eventually led to their very
influential 1978 book called, "The hippocampus as a cognitive map".
As with the memory theory, there is now almost universal agreement
that spatial coding somehow plays an important role in hippocampal
function, but the details are widely debated.
Role in general memory
Psychologists and neuroscientists generally
agree that the hippocampus has an important role in the formation
of new memories about
experienced events (episodic
or autobiographical
memory). Some researchers prefer to consider the hippocampus as
part of a larger medial
temporal lobe memory system responsible for general declarative
memory (memories that can be explicitly verbalized —
these would include, for example, memory for
facts in addition to episodic memory). Damage to the
hippocampus usually results in profound difficulties in forming new
memories (anterograde
amnesia), and normally also affects access to memories prior to
the damage (retrograde
amnesia). Although the retrograde effect normally extends some
years prior to the brain damage, in some cases older memories
remain - this sparing of older memories leads to the idea that
consolidation over time involves the transfer of memories out of
the hippocampus to other parts of the brain. However,
experimentation has difficulties in testing the sparing of older
memories; and, in some cases of retrograde amnesia, the sparing
appears to affect memories formed decades before the damage to the
hippocampus occurred, so its role in maintaining these older
memories remains uncertain.
Damage to the hippocampus does not affect some
aspects of memory, such as the ability to learn new skills (playing
a musical instrument, for example), suggesting that such abilities
depend on a different type of memory (procedural
memory) and different brain regions. And there is evidence to
suggest that patient H.
M. (who had his medial temporal lobes removed bilaterally as a
treatment for epilepsy
Role in spatial memory and navigation
Evidence suggests the hippocampus is used in
storing and processing spatial information. Studies in rats have
shown that neurons in
the hippocampus have spatial firing fields. These cells are called
place
cells. Some cells fire when the animal finds itself in a
particular location, regardless of direction of travel, while most
are at least partially sensitive to head direction and direction of
travel. In rats, some cells, termed context-dependent cells, may
alter their firing depending on the animal's past (retrospective)
or expected future (prospective). Different cells fire at different
locations, so that, by looking at the firing of the cells alone, it
becomes possible to tell where the animal is. Place cells have now
been seen in humans involved in finding their way around in a
virtual
reality town. The findings resulted from research with
individuals with electrodes implanted in their brains as a
diagnostic part of surgical treatment for serious epilepsy.
The discovery of place cells led to the idea that
the hippocampus might act as a cognitive map — a neural
representation of the layout of the environment. Recent evidence
has cast doubt on this perspective, indicating that the hippocampus
might be crucial for more fundamental processes within navigation.
Regardless, studies with animals have shown that an intact
hippocampus is required for simple spatial memory tasks (for
instance, finding the way back to a hidden goal).
Without a fully functional hippocampus, humans
may not successfully remember where they have been and how to get
where they are going. Researchers believe that the hippocampus
plays a particularly important role in finding shortcuts and new
routes between familiar places. Some people exhibit more skill at
this sort of navigation than do others, and brain imaging shows
that these individuals have more active hippocampi when
navigating.
London's taxi
drivers must learn a large number of places — and know the most
direct routes between them (they have to pass a strict test,
The
Knowledge, before being licensed to drive the famous black
cabs). A study at University College London by Maguire, et al
(2000) showed that part of the hippocampus is larger in taxi
drivers than in the general public, and that more experienced
drivers have bigger hippocampi. Whether having a bigger hippocampus
helps an individual to become a cab driver or finding shortcuts for
a living makes an individual's hippocampus grow is yet to be
elucidated. However, in that study Maguire, et al examined the
correlation between size of the grey matter and length of time that
had been spent as a taxi driver, and found that the longer an
individual had spent as a taxi driver, the larger the volume of the
right hippocampus. It was found that the total volume of the
hipocampus remained constant, from the control group vs. taxi
drivers. That is to say that the posterior portion of a taxi
driver's hippocampus is indeed increased, but at the expense of the
anterior portion. There have been no known detrimental effects
reported from this disparity in hippocampal proportions.
Anatomy
Anatomically, the hippocampus is an elaboration
of the edge of the cortex. It can be distinguished as a zone where
the cortex narrows into a single layer of very densely packed
neurons, which curls into a tight S shape. The structures that line
the edge of the cortex make up the so-called limbic
system (Latin limbus = border): these include the hippocampus,
cingulate cortex, olfactory cortex, and amygdala. Paul
MacLean once suggested, as part of his triune brain
theory, that the limbic structures comprise the neural basis of
emotion. Most neuroscientists no longer believe that the concept of
a unified "limbic system" is valid, though.
The hippocampus, as a whole, ends up looks
something like a curved tube, which has been analogized variously
to a seahorse, or a ram's horn (Cornu Ammonis), or a banana. This
general layout holds across the full range of mammalian species,
from hedgehog to human, although the details vary. In the rat, the
two hippocampi look astonishingly like a pair of bananas, joined at
the stem. In human or monkey brains, the portion of the hippocampus
down at the bottom, near the base of the temporal lobe, is much
broader than the part at the top. One of the consequences of this
complex geometry is that cross-sections through the hippocampus can
show a variety of shapes, depending on the angle and location of
the cut.
The strongest connections of the hippocampus are
with the entorhinal cortex (EC), which lies next to it in the
temporal lobe. The superficial layers of the EC provide the most
numerous inputs to the hippocampus, and the deep layers of the EC
receive the most numerous outputs. The EC, in turn, is strongly,
and reciprocally, connected with many other parts of the cortex.
The hippocampus also receives a very important projection from the
medial septal area. Destruction of the septal area abolishes the
hippocampal theta rhythm, and severely impairs certain types of
memory. (So-called "date rape" drugs are thought to exert their
amnestic effects at least partly by antagonizing the cholinergic
projection from the medial septum to the hippocampus.)
Physiology
The hippocampus shows two major "modes" of
activity, each associated with a distinct pattern of EEG waves and
neural population activity. These modes are named after the EEG
patterns associated with them: theta and large irregular activity
(LIA). Here are some of their main characteristics in the rat, the
animal that has been most extensively studied:
The theta mode appears during states of active,
alert behavior (especially locomotion), and also during REM
(dreaming) sleep. In the theta mode, the EEG is dominated by large
regular waves with a frequency range of 6-9 Hz, and the main groups
of hippocampal neurons (pyramidal cells and granule cells) show
sparse population activity, which means that in any short time
interval, the great majority of cells are silent, while the small
remaining fraction fire at relatively high rates, up to 50 spikes
in one second for the most active of them. An active cell typically
stays active for from half a second to a few seconds. As the rat
behaves, the active cells fall silent and new cells become active,
but the overall percentage of active cells remains more or less
constant. In many situations, cell activity is determined largely
by the spatial location of the animal, but other behavioral
variables also clearly influence it.
The LIA mode appears during slow-wave
(non-dreaming) sleep, and also during states of waking immobility,
such as resting or eating. In the LIA mode, the EEG is dominated by
sharp waves, which are randomly-timed large deflections of the EEG
signal lasting for 200-300 msec. These sharp waves also determine
the population neural activity patterns. Between them, pyramidal
cells and granule cells are very quiet (but not silent). During a
sharp wave, as many as 5-10% of the population may emit action
potentials during a period of 50 msec; many of these cells emit not
one but a burst of spikes.
These two hippocapampal activity modes can be
seen in primates as well as rats, with the important exception that
it has been difficult to see robust theta rhythmicity in the
primate hippocampus. There are, however, qualitatively similar
sharp waves, and similar state-dependent changes in neural
population activity..
The theta rhythm
Because of its densely packed neural layers, the
hippocampus generates some of the largest EEG signals of any brain
structure. In some situations the EEG is dominated by regular
waves, often continuing for many seconds. This EEG pattern is known
as the theta rhythm.
It was one of the earliest EEG phenomena to be discovered: the
first description came from Jung and Kornmuller, in 1938. It was
not until 1954, however, with the publication by Green and Arduini
of a long and thorough study of theta rhythm in rabbits, cats, and
monkeys, that interest really took off. Perhaps largely because
they related the theta rhythm to arousal, which was the hot topic
of the day, their paper provoked a flood of followup studies,
resulting in the publication of literally hundreds of studies of
the physiology and pharmacology of theta during the 1950s and
1960s. In spite of this rather daunting body of work, many
questions remained unanswered, especially the question of function.
Even at present this most critical of questions has not yet been
convincingly answered.
Theta rhythmicity is very obvious in rabbits and
rodents, and also clearly present in cats and dogs. Whether theta
can be seen in primates is a vexing question. Green and Arduini
reported only very short bursts of rather irregular rhythmicity in
monkeys, and most later studies have seen little more. However,
variations in methodology have made it difficult to draw strong
conclusions.
In rats (the animals that have been by far the
most extensively studied), theta is seen mainly in two conditions:
first, when an animal is walking or in some other way actively
interacting with its surroundings; second, during REM sleep. The
frequency increases as a function of running speed, starting at
about 6.5 Hz on the low end, and increasing to about 9 Hz on the
high end, although higher frequencies are sometimes seen for
dramatic movements such as jumps across wide gaps. In other,
larger, species of animals, theta frequencies are generally a bit
lower. The behavioral dependency also seems to vary by species: in
cats and rabbits, theta is often observed during states of
motionless alertness. This has been reported for rats as well, but
only when they are severely frightened.
Theta is not just confined to the hippocampus. In
rats, it can be observed in many parts of the brain, including
nearly all that interact strongly with the hippocampus. The
pacemaker for the rhythm is thought to lie within the medial septal
area: this area projects to all of the regions that show theta
rhythmicity, and destruction of it eliminates theta throughout the
brain. (There may be one exception, a small area in the
hypothalamus called the supramamillary nucleus, which seems to be
capable of sustaining theta independently of the septum in some
situations.)
The function of theta, presuming it has one, has
not yet been convincingly explained, although numerous theories
have been proposed. The most popular trend has been to relate it to
learning and memory. It is well established that lesions of the
medial septum---the central node of the theta system---cause severe
disruptions of memory. However, the medium septum is more than just
the controller of theta, it is also the main source of cholinergic
projections to the hippocampus. It has not been established that
septal lesions exert their effects specifically by eliminating
theta.
Sharp waves
During sleep, or during waking states when an
animal is resting or otherwise not engaged with its surroundings,
the hippocampal EEG shows a pattern of irregular slow waves,
somewhat larger in amplitude than theta waves. This pattern is
occasionally interrupted by large surges called sharp waves. These
events are associated with bursts of spike activity, lasting 50-100
msec, in pyramidal cells of CA3 and CA1. They are also associated
with short-lasting high-frequency EEG oscillations called
"ripples". Ripples, with frequencies in the range 150-200 Hz in
rats, can usually be detected only by electrodes located either
inside, or very close to, the CA1 cell body layer. In contrast,
electrodes located anywhere inside the hippocampus, or even in
neighboring brain structures, will often pick up sharp waves as
large slow EEG deflections, lasting 200-400 msec.
In rats, sharp waves are most robust during
sleep, when they occur at an average rate around 1 per second, but
in a very irregular temporal pattern. Sharp waves also occur during
inactive waking states, but they are less frequent then and usually
smaller. Sharp waves have also been observed in the human temporal
lobe and monkey hippocampus. In monkeys, sharp waves are quite
robust, but do not occur nearly as frequently as in rats.
One of the most interesting aspects of sharp
waves is that they appear to be associated with memory. Wilson and
McNaughton 1994, and numerous later studies, reported that when
hippocampal place cells have overlapping spatial firing fields (and
therefore often fire in near-simultaneity), they tend to show
correlated activity during sleep following the behavioral session.
This enhancement of correlation, commonly known as reactivation,
has been found to be confined mainly to sharp waves. It has been
proposed that sharp waves are, in fact, reactivations of neural
activity patterns that were memorized during behavior, driven by
strengthening of synaptic connections within the hippocampus. This
idea forms a key component of the "two-stage memory" theory,
advocated by Buzsaki and others, which proposes that memories are
stored within the hippocampus during behavior, and then later
transferred to the neocortex during sleep: sharp waves are
suggested to drive Hebbian synaptic changes in the neocortical
targets of hippocampal output pathways.
Evolution
The hippocampus has a generally similar
appearance across the range of mammal species, from basal ones such
as the hedgehog to the most "advanced" ones such as humans. The
hippocampal-size-to-body-size ratio broadly increases, being about
twice as large for primates as for the hedgehog. It does not,
however, increase at anywhere close to the rate of the
neocortex-to-body-size ratio. Thus, the hippocampus takes up a much
larger volume of the cortical mantle in rodents than in
primates.
There is also a general relationship between the
size of the hippocampus and spatial memory: when comparisons are
made between similar species, ones that have a greater capacity for
spatial memory tend to have larger hippocampal volumes.. This
relationship also extends to sex differences: in species where
males and females show strong differences in spatial memory
ability, they also tend to show corresponding differences in
hippocampal volume
Non-mammalian species do not have a brain
structure that looks like the mammalian hippocampus, but they have
one that is considered homologous
to it. The hippocampus, as pointed out above, is essentially the
medial edge of the cortex. Only mammals have a fully developed
cortex, but the structure it evolved from, called the pallium,
is present in all vertebrates, even the most primitive ones such as
the lamprey or hagfish. The pallium is usually divided into three
zones: medial, lateral, and dorsal. The medial pallium forms the
precursor of the hippocampus. It does not resemble the hippocampus
visually, because the layers are not warped into an S shape or
enwrapped by the dentate gyrus, but the homology in indicated by
strong chemical and functional affinities. There is now evidence
that these hippocampal-like stuctures are involved in spatial
cognition in birds, reptiles, and fish.
In birds, the correspondence is sufficiently well
established that most anatomists refer to the medial pallial zone
as the "avian hippocampus". Numerous species of birds have strong
spatial skills, particularly those that cache food. There is
evidence that food-caching birds have a larger hippocampus than
other types of birds, and that damage to the hippocampus causes
impairments in spatial memory..
The story for fish is more complex. In teleost fish (which make up the
great majority of existing species), the forebrain is weirdly
distorted in comparison to other types of vertebrates. Most
neuroanatomists believe that the teleost forebrain is essentially
everted, like a sock turned inside-out, so that structures that lie
in the interior, next to the ventricles, for most vertebrates, are
found on the outside in teleost fish, and vice versa. One of the
consequences of this is that the medial pallium ("hippocampal"
zone) of a typical vertebrate is thought to correspond to the
lateral pallium of a typical fish. Several types of fish
(particularly goldfish) have been show experimentally to have
strong spatial memory abilities, even forming "cognitive maps" of
the areas they inhabit.
(Long-distance navigation, such as homing by
salmon, seems to rely on different mechanisms, however.)
Thus, the role of the hippocampal region in
navigation appears to begin far back in vertebrate evolution,
predating splits that occurred hundreds of millions of years ago.
It is not yet known whether the medial pallium plays a similar role
in even more primitive vertebrates, such as sharks and rays, or
even lampreys and hagfish. Some types of insects, and molluscs such
as the octopus, also have strong spatial learning and navigation
abilities, but these appear to work differently from the mammalian
spatial system, so there is as yet no good reason to think that
they have a common evolutionary origin; nor is there sufficient
similarity in brain structure to enable anything resembling a
"hippocampus" to be identified in these species.
Notes
References
Additional images
corpus
callosum from below. Image:Human brain frontal (coronal)
section description 2.JPG|Human brain frontal (coronal) section
Image:Human brain right dissected lateral view
description.JPG|Human brain right dissected lateral view
Image:Hippocampus (brain).jpg||Diagram of the humanhippocampus :
Dentate
gyrus.]]
See also
External links
- Diagram of network
- International Symposium “HIPPOCAMPUS AND MEMORY”
- Diagram of a Hippocampal Brain Slice
- Temporal-lobe.com An interactive diagram of the rat parahippocampal-hippocampal region
hippocampus in Danish: Hippocampus
hippocampus in German: Hippocampus
hippocampus in Spanish: Hipocampo
(anatomía)
hippocampus in French: Hippocampe
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hippocampus in Indonesian: Hippocampus
hippocampus in Icelandic: Dreki
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hippocampus in Italian: Ippocampo
(anatomia)
hippocampus in Hebrew: היפוקמפוס
hippocampus in Hungarian: Hippokampusz
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hippocampus in Japanese: 海馬 (脳)
hippocampus in Norwegian: Hippocampus
hippocampus in Polish: Hipokamp
hippocampus in Portuguese: Hipocampo
hippocampus in Russian: Гиппокамп (часть
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hippocampus in Finnish: Hippokampus
hippocampus in Swedish: Hippocampus
hippocampus in Vietnamese: Hippocampus
hippocampus in Chinese: 海马体