All Stories

  1. Anterior thalamic nuclei lesions have a greater impact than mammillothalamic tract lesions on the extended hippocampal system: A reply
  2. Fornical and nonfornical projections from the rat hippocampal formation to the anterior thalamic nuclei
  3. Nucleus reuniens of the thalamus contains head direction cells
  4. The origin of projections from the posterior cingulate and retrosplenial cortices to the anterior, medial dorsal and laterodorsal thalamic nuclei of macaque monkeys
  5. Segregation of parallel inputs to the anteromedial and anteroventral thalamic nuclei of the rat
  6. Dismantling the Papez circuit for memory in rats
  7. The anterior thalamus provides a subcortical circuit supporting memory and spatial navigation
  8. Medial temporal lobe projections to the retrosplenial cortex of the macaque monkey
  9. Projections from Gudden's tegmental nuclei to the mammillary body region in the cynomolgus monkey (Macaca fascicularis)
  10. A role for the head-direction system in geometric learning
  11. Selective disconnection of the hippocampal formation projections to the mammillary bodies produces only mild deficits on spatial memory tasks: Implications for fornix function
  12. Hippocampus and neocortex: recognition and spatial memory
  13. Differential regulation of synaptic plasticity of the hippocampal and the hypothalamic inputs to the anterior thalamus
  14. Re-evaluating the role of the mammillary bodies in memory
  15. Hippocampal–anterior thalamic pathways for memory: uncovering a network of direct and indirect actions
  16. Parallel but separate inputs from limbic cortices to the mammillary bodies and anterior thalamic nuclei in the rat
  17. Effects of selective granular retrosplenial cortex lesions on spatial working memory in rats
  18. What does the retrosplenial cortex do?
  19. Granular and dysgranular retrosplenial cortices provide qualitatively different contributions to spatial working memory: evidence from immediate‐early gene imaging in rats
  20. Hippocampal, retrosplenial, and prefrontal hypoactivity in a model of diencephalic amnesia: Evidence towards an interdependent subcortical‐cortical memory network
  21. Lesions of the fornix and anterior thalamic nuclei dissociate different aspects of hippocampal-dependent spatial learning: Implications for the neural basis of scene learning.
  22. Do rats with retrosplenial cortex lesions lack direction?
  23. Memory loss resulting from fornix and septal damage: Impaired supra-span recall but preserved recognition over a 24-hour delay.
  24. A disproportionate role for the fornix and mammillary bodies in recall versus recognition memory
  25. Chapter 5.2 Using hippocampal amnesia to understand the neural basis of diencephalic amnesia
  26. Distinct, parallel pathways link the medial mammillary bodies to the anterior thalamus in macaque monkeys
  27. Impaired spatial and non-spatial configural learning in patients with hippocampal pathology
  28. Projections from the hippocampal region to the mammillary bodies in macaque monkeys
  29. Transient spatial deficit associated with bilateral lesions of the lateral mammillary nuclei
  30. Sparing of the familiarity component of recognition memory in a patient with hippocampal pathology
  31. Selective dysgranular retrosplenial cortex lesions in rats disrupt allocentric performance of the radial-arm maze task.
  32. Testing the importance of the retrosplenial guidance system: effects of different sized retrosplenial cortex lesions on heading direction and spatial working memory
  33. Testing the importance of the retrosplenial navigation system: lesion size but not strain matters: a reply to Harker and Whishaw
  34. Anterior thalamic lesions stop immediate early gene activation in selective laminae of the retrosplenial cortex: evidence of covert pathology in rats?
  35. The mammillary bodies: two memory systems in one?
  36. Lesions of the mammillothalamic tract impair the acquisition of spatial but not nonspatial contextual conditional discriminations
  37. Extensive cytotoxic lesions of the rat retrosplenial cortex reveal consistent deficits on tasks that tax allocentric spatial memory.