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A tale of two algorithms: Structured slots explain prefrontal sequence memory and are unified with hippocampal cognitive maps

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This week we will discuss and debate a very recent paper by Whittington and colleagues (2025).

Abstract: “Remembering events is crucial to intelligent behavior. Flexible memory retrieval requires a cognitive map and is supported by two key brain systems: hippocampal episodic memory (EM) and prefrontal working memory (WM). Although an understanding of EM is emerging, little is understood of WM beyond simple memory retrieval. We develop a mathematical theory relating the algorithms and representations of EM and WM by unveiling a duality between storing memories in synapses versus neural activity. This results in a formalism of prefrontal WM as structured, controllable neural subspaces (activity slots) representing dynamic cognitive maps without synaptic plasticity. Using neural networks, we elucidate differences, similarities, and trade-offs between the hippocampal and prefrontal algorithms. Lastly, we show that prefrontal representations in tasks from list learning to cue-dependent recall are unified as controllable activity slots. Our results unify frontal and temporal representations of memory and offer a new understanding for dynamic prefrontal representations of WM” (Whittington et al., 2025).

Reference: Whittington, J. C. R., Dorrell, W., Behrens, T. E. J., Ganguli, S & El-Gaby, M. (2025). A tale of two algorithms: Structured slots explain prefrontal sequence memory and are unified with hippocampal cognitive maps. Neuron, 113(2). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2024.10.017

This talk is part of the The Craik Journal Club series.

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