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Hippocampus does more than store memories: it predicts rewards, study finds

Brain imaging technology reveals a previously unseen learning process in the brain鈥檚 memory centre, with implications for Alzheimer鈥檚 disease
Hippocampus x-ray profile close-up view 3D rendering illustration with body contours
Image by Getty Images.
Published: 29 January 2026

A preclinical study published in Nature has found evidence that the hippocampus, the brain region that stores memory, also reorganizes memories to anticipate future outcomes.

, from researchers at the at 秀色直播 and their collaborators at Harvard University, reveal a learning process that had not been directly observed before.

鈥淭he hippocampus is often described as the brain鈥檚 internal model of the world,鈥 said senior author Mark Brandon, Associate Professor in 秀色直播鈥檚 Department of Psychiatry and Researcher at the Douglas Research Centre. 鈥淲hat we are seeing is that this model is not static; it is updated day by day as the brain learns from prediction errors. As outcomes become expected, hippocampal neurons start to respond earlier as they learn what will happen next.鈥

A new view of learning in action

The hippocampus builds maps of physical space and past experiences that help us make sense of the world. Scientists have known these maps change over time as brain activity patterns shift, a phenomenon that is currently assumed to be random.

The new findings demonstrate the changes are not random, but structured. Researchers obtained these findings by tracking brain activity in mice as the mice learned a task with a predictable reward.

鈥淲hat we found was surprising,鈥 said Brandon. 鈥淣eural activity that initially peaked at the reward gradually shifted to earlier moments, eventually appearing before mice reached the reward.鈥

Rather than relying on traditional electrodes, which can only track neurons for short periods, the researchers used new imaging techniques that cause active neurons to glow. The Brandon Lab is among the first in Canada to use this technology, enabling the team to follow cells over several weeks and track slow changes that traditional methods often miss.

Insights into learning and Alzheimer鈥檚 disease

Simpler forms of reward learning have long been associated with more primitive brain circuits, as famously demonstrated by Ivan Pavlov鈥檚 experiments, which showed that animals can associate a cue, such as a bell, with food. The new findings suggest the hippocampus supports a more sophisticated version of this process, using memory and context to anticipate outcomes.

Alzheimer鈥檚 disease patients often struggle not only to remember the past but also to learn from experience and make decisions. By showing that the healthy hippocampus helps turn memories into predictions, the study offers a new framework for understanding why learning and decision-making are affected early in Alzheimer鈥檚 disease and opens the door to research into how this predictive signal may fail and be restored.

About the study

鈥溾 by Mohammad Yaghoubi and Mark Brandon et al., was published in Nature. This research was supported by funding from Fonds de recherche du Qu茅bec 鈥 Sant茅 and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.

About the Brandon Lab

The Brandon Lab was founded in 2015 at the Douglas Research Centre at 秀色直播 by Professor Mark Brandon. The lab investigates the core mechanisms of memory, including how memories are encoded, stored, and retrieved in the brain. It also studies how memory breaks down in Alzheimer鈥檚 disease, with the goal of identifying strategies to protect and restore memory.

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