The representation of identity and experience become independent from each other along the cortico-hippocampal pathway.
(A) Pearson correlation coefficients between SVM weights for decoding familiar and novel odor identity (*p<0.01, **p<0.01). Error bars: Standard error of the mean (SEM). (B) Schematic representation of the methodology to calculate error rate inside and outside the experience category (novel vs. familiar) with the example of a novel odor A. (C) Proportion of errors per region. Solid and dashed lines represent the proportion of errors inside and outside the same experience category, respectively. (ns: not significant, **p<0.01, Wilcoxon rank-sum test). Error bars: SD. (D) Position of odors in the neural space for the 10 trials of four familiar odors (blue) and six novels (orange). The first two components of the PCA were used. Percentage explained by the first two dimensions: AON 31%, aPCx 15%, LEC 12%, CA1 15%, and SUB 28%. (E) Normalized Euclidean distance of principal components between novel and familiar odors divided by the average distance between all trials, pooled irrespective of experience (p<0.01, Kruskal-Wallis). Post-hoc pairwise comparison revealed significant differences between all regions (*p<0.05, **p<0.01, Mann-Whitney). Error bars: 95% CI of the mean. (F) Probability of responding to one or more familiar odors if a neuron responded to at least one novel odor (p<0.001, Kruskal-Wallis). AON and aPCx significantly different from LEC, CA1, and SUB (p<0.01, Mann-Whitney). Error bars: 95% CI of the mean. (G) Standard deviation of the firing rate in response to olfactory stimuli (p<0.001, Kruskal Wallis test). Response variability gradually decreases from AON to SUB (ns: not significant, *p<0.01, **p<0.01, Mann-Whitney). Error bars: 95% CI of the mean.