Black-capped
chickadees have extraordinary memories that can recall the locations of
thousands of morsels of food to help them survive the winter. Now scientists at
Columbia's Zuckerman Institute have discovered how the chickadees can remember
so many details: they memorize each food location using brain cell activity
akin to a barcode. These new findings may shed light on how the brain creates
memories for the events that make up our lives.
"We see the world through our
memories of objects, places and people," said Dmitriy Aronov, Ph.D., a
principal investigator at Columbia's Zuckerman Institute and an assistant
professor of neuroscience at Columbia's Vagelos College of Physicians and
Surgeons.
"Memories entirely define the way
we see and interact with the world. With this bird, we have a way to understand memory in
an incredibly simplified way, and in understanding their memory, we will
understand something about ourselves."
This barcode-like formatting of memory, revealed for
the first time in
the journal Cell, may be a common
tactic in animal brains, including those of humans.
"There are many findings in humans
that are totally consistent with a barcode mechanism," said postdoctoral
research fellow Selmaan Chettih, Ph.D., the study's co-first author along with
Emily Mackevicius, Ph.D.
Chickadees are "memory
geniuses," said Dr. Aronov, the study's corresponding author. They are
masters of episodic memory—the brain's ability to recall specific moments, such
as stashing a bit of food away under tree bark or in a knothole. This can prove
a matter of life or death for them, since unlike most birds that live in cold
places, chickadees don't migrate during the winter. This means their survival
hinges on remembering where they hid food during warmer months, with some
making up to 5,000 of these stashes per day.
Chickadees caching seeds in the testing arena.
Credit: Cell/Chettih et al.
Scientists have long known that
these birds rely on the hippocampus–a brain structure critical for memory in
all vertebrates, including humans–for storing memories of their caches.
However, no one had identified the specific neural activity in the hippocampus
that encodes episodic memories such as food-caching events.
"The question we're trying to
answer is, 'What physically is a memory?'" Dr. Chettih said.
Chickadees may help scientists
unlock this mystery. To explore the prodigious memories of chickadees, Dr.
Aronov and his team built indoor
arenas inspired
by the birds' natural habitats.
"Scientists have marveled at
the memory of these birds for decades, but what has been a mystery is what was
going on in their brains to support these memories," said Dr. Aronov.
"Now we have neural recording and behavior tracking tools at our disposal
to advance our knowledge of how these birds are capable of these feats of
memory."
In typical experiments, a black-capped chickadee instinctively hides sunflower seeds in holes in the arenas as the researchers monitor activity in the hippocampus. Meanwhile, six cameras also record the birds as they flit about, with an artificial intelligence system automatically tracking them as they stash and retrieve seeds.
Chickadee seed caching with 3D postural tracking.
Credit: Cell/Chettih et al.
The scientists unexpectedly found
that each time a chickadee stashed a seed, hippocampal neurons fired in a
unique pattern. These fleeting patterns reactivated when the birds retrieved
that specific food cache.
"These are very striking
patterns of activity, but they're very brief—only about a second long on
average," Dr. Chettih said. "If you didn't know exactly when and why
they happened, it would be very easy to miss them."
As the researchers mulled over
their data, the idea of neural barcodes as unique labels for different events
began to make sense, they said.
These barcode patterns exist
independently from the activity of hippocampal neurons, called place cells, which encode memories of
locations. Each barcode remains distinct, even when it comes to stashes hidden
at the same place but different times, or at neighboring stashes made in quick
succession.
"Many hippocampal studies have
focused on place cells, with the Nobel Prize awarded for their discovery in
2014," Dr. Aronov said.
"So the assumption in the
field was that episodic memory must have something to do with changes in place
cells. We find that place cells don't actually change when birds form new
memories. Instead, during food caching, there are additional patterns of
activity beyond those seen with place cells."
Going forward, the researchers want
to see if the chickadees activate barcodes when looking for caches from remote
locations.
"That's what we might expect
if they are planning to retrieve a cached item before they actually do
it," Dr. Chettih said. "We want to identify those moments when a bird
is thinking about a location but it's not there yet, and see if activating a
barcode might drive a bird to go to a cache."
The researchers are also eager to
know if the barcoding tactic they have uncovered chickadees is in widespread
use among other animals, including humans. Such research may help shed light on
a core part of the human experience.
"If you think about how people define themselves, who they think they are, their sense of self, then episodic memories of particular events are central to that," Dr. Chettih said. "That's what we're trying to understand."
Source: Chickadees have unique neural 'barcodes' for memories of stashing away food (phys.org)
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