TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that a transition to a crystalline, topologically rigid hippocampal geometry underpins extreme memory capacity, surpassing disorganized codes in stability and scalability.
Contribution
It introduces the concept that geometric stability and topological organization, rather than neuron proliferation, enable high-capacity biological memory.
Findings
Crystalline hippocampal geometry exhibits higher stability and coherence.
Crystalline codes sustain high-fidelity readout beyond 1,000 locations.
Memory capacity is linked to a 169-fold representational redundancy.
Abstract
Memory systems can store vastly different amounts of information despite similar hardware constraints. Here, we show that superior spatial memory emerges from a discrete stiffening of hippocampal population geometry-a transition from disorganized to crystalline collective coding. Comparing food-caching chickadees to non-caching zebra finches, we found that the caching hippocampus maintains a topologically rigid, "crystalline" geometry with significantly higher geometric stability (Shesha 0.245 v 0.166) and nearly two-fold greater temporal coherence (Shesha 0.393 v 0.209), while the non-caching hippocampus resembles a disorganized "mist." This stability is actively constructed by synergistic circuit dynamics: excitatory neurons form the spatial scaffold while inhibitory populations contribute orthogonal decorrelation, a circuit motif in which excitatory and inhibitory populations occupy…
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