Storing and recalling distinct memories are essential brain functions that play key roles in guiding our day-to-day behavior. For example, you may encounter your old school professor whom you have not seen in ten years. His hair is thinner and grayer, he wears different glasses, and has put on some weight. Nonetheless, your brain allows you to retrieve your old memories of this individual even though the inputs are altered. At the same time, you also want to create a distinct, new memory of the individual you have seen today. How can the brain allow both processes (neuronal discrimination and generalization) to occur simultaneously? A brain structure called the hippocampus is thought to be in charge of this task. However, it is still unclear how and where in the hippocampus distinct memories of similar events are formed, and surprisingly little is known about how these memory representations are then used to guide our behavior. In the reporting period of the project FindMEMO, I aimed to address this ambitious key question: How are distinct memories formed and used for behavior?