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在新环境中以及线索冲突情况下监测头部方向细胞的活动。

Head direction cell activity monitored in a novel environment and during a cue conflict situation.

作者信息

Taube J S, Burton H L

机构信息

Department of Psychology, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire 03755, USA.

出版信息

J Neurophysiol. 1995 Nov;74(5):1953-71. doi: 10.1152/jn.1995.74.5.1953.

Abstract
  1. Recent conceptualizations of the neural systems used during navigation have classified two types of sensory information used by animals: landmark cues and internally based (idiothetic; e.g., vestibular, kinesthetic) sensory cues. Previous studies have identified neurons in the postsubiculum and the anterior thalamic nuclei that discharge as a function of the animal's head direction in the horizontal plane. The present study was designed to determine how animals use head direction (HD) cells for spatial orientation and the types of sensory cues involved. 2. HD cell activity was monitored in the postsubiculum and anterior thalamic nucleus of rats in a dual-chamber apparatus in an experiment that consisted of two phases. In the first phase, HD cell activity was monitored as an animal moved from a familiar environment to a novel environment. It was hypothesized that if HD cells were capable of using idiothetic sensory information, then the direction of maximal discharge should remain relatively unchanged as the animal moved into an environment where it was unfamiliar with the landmark cues. In the second phase, HD cells were monitored under conditions in which a conflict situation was introduced between the established landmark cues and the animal's internally generated sensory cues. 3. HD cells were initially recorded in a cylinder containing a single orientation cue (familiar environment). A door was then opened, and the rat entered a U-shaped passageway leading to a rectangular chamber containing a different prominent cue (novel environment). For most HD cells, the preferred direction remained relatively constant between the cylinder and passageway/rectangle, although many cells showed a small (6-30 degrees) shift in their preferred direction in the novel environment. This directional shift was maintained across different episodes in the passageway/rectangle. 4. Before the next session, the orientation cue in the cylinder was rotated 90 degrees, and the animal returned to the cylinder. The cell's preferred direction usually shifted between 45 and 90 degrees in the same direction. 5. The rat was then permitted to walk back through the passageway into the now-familiar rectangle. Immediately upon entering the passageway, the preferred direction returned to its original (prerotation) orientation and remained at this value while the rat was in the rectangle. When the rat was allowed to walk back into the cylinder, one of three outcomes occurred: 1) the cell's preferred direction shifted, such that it remained linked to the cylinder's rotated cue card; 2) the cell's preferred direction remained unchanged from its orientation in the rectangle; or 3) the cell's preferred direction shifted to a new value that lay between the preferred directions for the rotated cylinder condition and rectangle. 6. There was little change in the HD cell's background firing rate, peak firing rate, or directional firing range for both the novel and cue-conflict situations. 7. Simultaneous recordings from multiple cells in different sessions showed that the preferred directions remained "in register" with one another. Thus, when one HD cell shifted its preferred direction a specific amount, the other HD cell also shifted its preferred direction the same amount. 8. Results across different series within the same animal showed that the amount the preferred direction shifted in the first Novel series was about the same amount as the shifts observed in subsequent Novel series. In contrast, as the animal experienced more Conflict series, HD cells tended to use the cylinder's cue card less as an orientation cue when the animal returned to the rotated cylinder condition from the rectangle. 9. These results suggest that HD cells in the postsubiculum and anterior thalamic nuclei receive information from both landmark and idiothetic sensory cues, and when both types of cues are available, HD cells preferentially use the landmark cues as long as they are perceived
摘要
  1. 最近对导航过程中所使用的神经系统的概念化分类,将动物所使用的两种感觉信息进行了区分:地标线索和基于内部的(自身感受性的;例如,前庭、动觉)感觉线索。先前的研究已经在海马后下托和丘脑前核中识别出了一些神经元,它们的放电是动物在水平面内头部方向的函数。本研究旨在确定动物如何利用头部方向(HD)细胞进行空间定向以及所涉及的感觉线索类型。2. 在一个双室装置中,对大鼠海马后下托和丘脑前核中的HD细胞活动进行监测,该实验由两个阶段组成。在第一阶段,当动物从熟悉的环境移动到新环境时,监测HD细胞的活动。据推测,如果HD细胞能够利用自身感受性感觉信息,那么当动物进入一个不熟悉地标线索的环境时,最大放电方向应该相对保持不变。在第二阶段,在既定的地标线索与动物内部产生的感觉线索之间引入冲突情况的条件下,监测HD细胞。3. HD细胞最初在一个包含单一方向线索的圆柱体(熟悉环境)中进行记录。然后打开一扇门,大鼠进入一个U形通道,通向一个包含不同突出线索的矩形室(新环境)。对于大多数HD细胞,在圆柱体和通道/矩形之间,偏好方向相对保持恒定,尽管许多细胞在新环境中其偏好方向有一个小的(6 - 30度)偏移。这种方向偏移在通道/矩形的不同时间段内保持不变。4. 在下一次实验之前,将圆柱体中的方向线索旋转90度,然后动物回到圆柱体中。细胞的偏好方向通常会在相同方向上偏移45到90度。5. 然后允许大鼠通过通道回到现在熟悉的矩形区域。一进入通道,偏好方向就会回到其原始(旋转前)方向,并在大鼠处于矩形区域时保持该值。当大鼠被允许回到圆柱体中时,会出现三种结果之一:1)细胞的偏好方向发生偏移,使其与圆柱体旋转后的线索卡保持关联;2)细胞的偏好方向与在矩形区域中的方向保持不变;或者3)细胞的偏好方向偏移到一个介于旋转圆柱体条件和矩形区域的偏好方向之间的新值。6. 在新环境和线索冲突情况下,HD细胞的背景放电率、峰值放电率或方向放电范围几乎没有变化。7. 在不同实验中对多个细胞的同步记录表明,偏好方向彼此之间保持“对齐”。因此,当一个HD细胞将其偏好方向偏移特定量时,另一个HD细胞也会将其偏好方向偏移相同的量。8. 同一动物不同系列实验的结果表明,在第一个新环境系列中偏好方向的偏移量与在随后的新环境系列中观察到的偏移量大致相同。相反,随着动物经历更多的冲突系列实验,当动物从矩形区域回到旋转后的圆柱体条件时,HD细胞倾向于较少地将圆柱体的线索卡用作定向线索。9. 这些结果表明,海马后下托和丘脑前核中的HD细胞接收来自地标和自身感受性感觉线索的信息,并且当两种类型的线索都可用时,只要能够感知到,HD细胞优先使用地标线索

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