Dissociation of allocentric and egocentric orientation: Effect on hippocampal place cells and place navigation

Détails

ID Serval
serval:BIB_40355
Type
Partie de livre
Sous-type
Chapitre: chapitre ou section
Collection
Publications
Institution
Titre
Dissociation of allocentric and egocentric orientation: Effect on hippocampal place cells and place navigation
Titre du livre
The hippocampal and parietal foundations of spatial cognition
Auteur⸱e⸱s
Bures J., Fenton A.A., Kaminsky Y., Rossier J., Sachetti B., Zinyuk L.
Editeur
Oxford: Oxford University Press
Lieu d'édition
Oxford
Statut éditorial
Publié
Date de publication
1999
Editeur⸱rice scientifique
Burgess J., Jeffery K.J., O'Keefe J.
Pages
167-185
Langue
anglais
Notes
Navigation by means of cognitive maps appears to require the hippocampus; hippocampal place cells (PCs) appear to store spatial memories because their discharge is confined to cell-specific places called firing fields (FFs). Experiments with rats manipulated idiothetic and landmark-related information to understand the relationship between PC activity and spatial rotation. Rotating a circular arena in the caused a discrepancy between these cuse. This discrepancy caused most FFs to disappear in both the arena and room reference frames. However, FFs persisted in the rotating arena frame when the discrepancy was reduced by darkness or by a card in the arena. The discrepancy was increased by "field clamping" the rat in a room-defined FF location by rotations that countered its locomotion. Most FFs disspared and reappeared an hour or more after the clamp. Place-avoidance experiments showed that navigation uses independent idiothetic and exteroceptive memories. Rats learned to avoid the unmarked footshock region within a circular arena. When acquired on the stable arena in the light, the location of the punishment was learned by using both room and idiothetic cues; extinction in the dark transferred to the following session in the light. If, however, extinction occured during rotation, only the arena-frame avoidance was extinguished in darkness; the room-defined location was avoided when the light were turned back on. Idiothetic memory of room-defined avoidance was not formed during rotation in light; regardless of rotation with a randomly dispersed pellet. The resulting behaviour alternated between random pellet searching and target-directed navigation, making it possible to examine PC correlates of these two classes of spatial behaviour. The independence of idiothetic and exteroceptive spatial memories and the disruption of PC firing during rotation suggest that PCs may not be necessary for spatial cognition; this idea can be tested by recording during place-avoidance and preference tasks.
Création de la notice
19/11/2007 11:17
Dernière modification de la notice
20/08/2019 14:38
Données d'usage