Department of Neurobiology, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot 76100, Israel.
Science. 2017 Jan 13;355(6321):176-180. doi: 10.1126/science.aak9589.
To navigate, animals need to represent not only their own position and orientation, but also the location of their goal. Neural representations of an animal's own position and orientation have been extensively studied. However, it is unknown how navigational goals are encoded in the brain. We recorded from hippocampal CA1 neurons of bats flying in complex trajectories toward a spatial goal. We discovered a subpopulation of neurons with angular tuning to the goal direction. Many of these neurons were tuned to an occluded goal, suggesting that goal-direction representation is memory-based. We also found cells that encoded the distance to the goal, often in conjunction with goal direction. The goal-direction and goal-distance signals make up a vectorial representation of spatial goals, suggesting a previously unrecognized neuronal mechanism for goal-directed navigation.
为了导航,动物不仅需要表示自身的位置和朝向,还需要表示目标的位置。动物自身位置和朝向的神经表示已经得到了广泛的研究。然而,导航目标在大脑中是如何被编码的还不得而知。我们记录了蝙蝠在飞向空间目标的复杂轨迹中飞行时海马 CA1 神经元的活动。我们发现了一个对目标方向有角度调谐的神经元亚群。这些神经元中有许多对被遮挡的目标有调谐,这表明目标方向的表示是基于记忆的。我们还发现了一些细胞编码到目标的距离,通常与目标方向结合在一起。目标方向和目标距离信号构成了空间目标的向量表示,这表明了一种用于目标导向导航的以前未被认识到的神经元机制。