Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania, 3710 Hamilton Walk, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Department of Biology, University of Texas at San Antonio, 1 UTSA Circle, San Antonio, TX 78249, USA.
Curr Biol. 2017 Feb 6;27(3):309-317. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2016.11.046. Epub 2017 Jan 12.
When a navigator's internal sense of direction is disrupted, she must rely on external cues to regain her bearings, a process termed spatial reorientation. Extensive research has demonstrated that the geometric shape of the environment exerts powerful control over reorientation behavior, but the neural and cognitive mechanisms underlying this phenomenon are not well understood. Whereas some theories claim that geometry controls behavior through an allocentric mechanism potentially tied to the hippocampus, others postulate that disoriented navigators reach their goals by using an egocentric view-matching strategy. To resolve this debate, we characterized hippocampal representations during reorientation. We first recorded from CA1 cells as disoriented mice foraged in chambers of various shapes. We found that the alignment of the recovered hippocampal map was determined by the geometry of the chamber, but not by nongeometric cues, even when these cues could be used to disambiguate geometric ambiguities. We then recorded hippocampal activity as disoriented mice performed a classical goal-directed spatial memory task in a rectangular chamber. Again, we found that the recovered hippocampal map aligned solely to the chamber geometry. Critically, we also found a strong correspondence between the hippocampal map alignment and the animal's behavior, making it possible to predict the search location of the animal from neural responses on a trial-by-trial basis. Together, these results demonstrate that spatial reorientation involves the alignment of the hippocampal map to local geometry. We hypothesize that geometry may be an especially salient cue for reorientation because it is an inherently stable aspect of the environment.
当导航者的内部方向感被打乱时,她必须依靠外部线索来重新确定方向,这个过程被称为空间重新定向。大量研究表明,环境的几何形状对重新定向行为具有强大的控制作用,但这一现象背后的神经和认知机制还不是很清楚。虽然有些理论声称,几何形状通过一种可能与海马体有关的无中心机制来控制行为,但也有人假设,迷失方向的导航者通过使用以自我为中心的视图匹配策略来达到目标。为了解决这一争论,我们描述了重新定向过程中海马体的表现。我们首先记录了在各种形状的室内觅食的迷失方向的老鼠的 CA1 细胞。我们发现,恢复的海马体图谱的对齐方式是由腔室的几何形状决定的,而不是由非几何线索决定的,即使这些线索可以用来消除几何上的模糊性。然后,我们在迷失方向的老鼠在矩形室内进行经典的目标导向空间记忆任务时记录了海马体的活动。同样,我们发现恢复的海马体图谱仅与腔室的几何形状对齐。至关重要的是,我们还发现海马体图谱的对齐与动物的行为之间存在很强的对应关系,这使得可以根据单次试验的神经反应来预测动物的搜索位置。这些结果共同表明,空间重新定向涉及到海马体图谱与局部几何形状的对齐。我们假设,几何形状可能是重新定向的一个特别明显的线索,因为它是环境中固有稳定的一个方面。