Department of Psychiatry, Douglas Hospital Research Centre, McGill University, Verdun, Quebec, Canada.
Integrated Program in Neuroscience, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Nature. 2023 Mar;615(7954):892-899. doi: 10.1038/s41586-023-05813-2. Epub 2023 Mar 22.
The head direction (HD) system functions as the brain's internal compass, classically formalized as a one-dimensional ring attractor network. In contrast to a globally consistent magnetic compass, the HD system does not have a universal reference frame. Instead, it anchors to local cues, maintaining a stable offset when cues rotate and drifting in the absence of referents. However, questions about the mechanisms that underlie anchoring and drift remain unresolved and are best addressed at the population level. For example, the extent to which the one-dimensional description of population activity holds under conditions of reorientation and drift is unclear. Here we performed population recordings of thalamic HD cells using calcium imaging during controlled rotations of a visual landmark. Across experiments, population activity varied along a second dimension, which we refer to as network gain, especially under circumstances of cue conflict and ambiguity. Activity along this dimension predicted realignment and drift dynamics, including the speed of network realignment. In the dark, network gain maintained a 'memory trace' of the previously displayed landmark. Further experiments demonstrated that the HD network returned to its baseline orientation after brief, but not longer, exposures to a rotated cue. This experience dependence suggests that memory of previous associations between HD neurons and allocentric cues is maintained and influences the internal HD representation. Building on these results, we show that continuous rotation of a visual landmark induced rotation of the HD representation that persisted in darkness, demonstrating experience-dependent recalibration of the HD system. Finally, we propose a computational model to formalize how the neural compass flexibly adapts to changing environmental cues to maintain a reliable representation of HD. These results challenge classical one-dimensional interpretations of the HD system and provide insights into the interactions between this system and the cues to which it anchors.
头部方向(HD)系统充当大脑的内部罗盘,经典地形式化为一维环吸引网络。与全局一致的磁罗盘不同,HD 系统没有通用的参考框架。相反,它锚定在局部线索上,在线索旋转时保持稳定的偏移,在没有参照的情况下漂移。然而,关于支撑锚定和漂移的机制的问题仍未解决,最好在群体水平上解决。例如,在重新定向和漂移的情况下,群体活动的一维描述在多大程度上成立尚不清楚。在这里,我们使用钙成像在受控的视觉地标旋转期间对丘脑 HD 细胞进行了群体记录。在整个实验中,群体活动沿着第二个维度变化,我们称之为网络增益,尤其是在线索冲突和模糊的情况下。沿这个维度的活动预测了重新对准和漂移动态,包括网络重新对准的速度。在黑暗中,网络增益保持了先前显示的地标“记忆痕迹”。进一步的实验表明,HD 网络在短暂但不是更长时间暴露于旋转线索后,会恢复到其基线方向。这种经验依赖性表明,HD 神经元与无参照线索之间先前关联的记忆得以维持,并影响内部 HD 表示。基于这些结果,我们表明,视觉地标连续旋转诱导 HD 表示的旋转,该旋转在黑暗中持续存在,证明了 HD 系统的经验依赖性重新校准。最后,我们提出了一个计算模型,以形式化神经罗盘如何灵活地适应不断变化的环境线索,以保持 HD 的可靠表示。这些结果挑战了 HD 系统的经典一维解释,并提供了对该系统与其锚定的线索之间相互作用的深入了解。