placefield
Placefield, or place field, in neuroscience refers to the region of an environment in which a hippocampal place cell increases its firing rate, signaling the animal’s location. Place fields were first described in the hippocampus of rats by John O’Keefe and Lynn Dostrovsky in 1971 and are most closely associated with pyramidal neurons in the CA1 and CA3 subregions, though cells in the dentate gyrus and subiculum can also display spatially selective firing.
Each place cell tends to fire when the animal is in a particular location, creating a sparse,
In experiments, researchers record single-unit activity in freely moving animals to construct rate maps, plotting firing