Abstract

Hippocampal replay is thought to be essential for the consolidation of event memories in hippocampal–neocortical networks. Replay is present during both sleep and waking behavior, but while sleep replay involves the reactivation of stored representations in the absence of specific sensory inputs, awake replay is thought to depend on sensory input from the current environment. Here we show that stored representations are reactivated during both waking and sleep replay. We found frequent awake replay of sequences of rat hippocampal place cells from a previous experience. This spatially remote replay was as common as local replay of the current environment and was most robust when the animal had recently been in motion as compared to during extended periods of quiescence. These results indicate that the hippocampus consistently replays past experiences during brief pauses in waking behavior, suggesting a role for waking replay in memory consolidation and retrieval.

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