Part of the limbic system called the hippocampal formation
It is divided into the dentate gyrus (dentate gyrus), hippocampus, subiculum, presubiculum, parasubiculum, and entorhinal cortex.
Dentate gyrus, hippocampus, and hippocampal branchia have a single cell layer
Other areas consist of multiple layers.
Andersen et al. (1971) argued for the importance of a characteristic circuit that connects each part of the hippocampal body in one direction, which they named the "trisynaptic circuit.
Because most sensory information flows to the hippocampus through the entorhinal cortex, the entorhinal cortex is often considered the starting point of the trisynaptic circuit.
The entorhinal cortex is composed of two adjacent cortical areas
The information is received from the
Much of this input is excitatory (Martina et al., 2001).
The vastus lateralis cortex (retrosplenial cortex) is also apparently a source of sensory information (van Groen and Wyss, 1992, Wyss and van Groen, 1992).
EC: entorhinal cortex
DG: Dentate gyrus
This figure is 2003,
In 1911, Spanish neuroanatomist Ramoni Cajal (Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1906, Figure 1) and others
Claims of input from layer 3 of the olfactory entorhinal cortex to CA2 in 2010.
Theta rhythm compression
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