Emerging evidence suggests that a group of dietary-derived phytochemicals known as flavonoids are able to induce improvements
in memory, learning and cognition. Flavonoids have been shown to modulate critical neuronal signalling pathways involved in
processes of memory, and therefore are likely to affect synaptic plasticity and long-term potentiation mechanisms, widely
considered to provide a basis for memory. Animal dietary supplementation studies have further shown that flavonoid-rich foods
are able to reverse age-related spatial memory and spatial learning impairments. A more accurate understanding of how a particular
spatial memory task works and of which aspects of memory and learning can be assessed in each case, are necessary for a correct
interpretation of data relating to diet-cognition experiments. Further understanding of how specific behavioural tasks relate
to the functioning of hippocampal circuitry during learning processes might be also elucidative of the specific observed memory
improvements. The overall goal of this review is to give an overview of how the hippocampal circuitry operates as a memory
system during behavioural tasks, which we believe will provide a new insight into the underlying mechanisms of the action
of flavonoids on cognition.
Keywords Spatial - Memory - Learning - Hippocampus - Flavonoids