4.7 Article

Predictive Representations in Hippocampal and Prefrontal Hierarchies

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 42, Issue 2, Pages 299-312

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1327-21.2021

Keywords

cognitive maps; hippocampus; navigation; predictive representations; PFC; successor representation

Categories

Funding

  1. Canadian Institute of Health Research grant [MOP49566]
  2. Canadian Institute of Health Research [MOP125958]
  3. Alzheimer Society of Canada
  4. James S. McDonnell Foundation
  5. Natural Sciences and Engineering Council
  6. National Institute of Mental Health [R01-MH104606]
  7. John Templeton Foundation [NIBIB R01EB022864]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Multiscale predictive representations play a crucial role in naturalistic navigation, organized along the hierarchies of prefrontal and hippocampal regions. The anterior PFC has the longest predictive horizons, while the posterior hippocampus has the shortest.
As we navigate the world, we use learned representations of relational structures to explore and to reach goals. Studies of how relational knowledge enables inference and planning are typically conducted in controlled small-scale settings. It remains unclear, however, how people use stored knowledge in continuously unfolding navigation (e.g., walking long distances in a city). We hypothesized that multiscale predictive representations guide naturalistic navigation in humans, and these scales are organized along posterior-anterior prefrontal and hippocampal hierarchies. We conducted model-based representational similarity analyses of neuroimaging data collected while male and female participants navigated realistically long paths in virtual reality. We tested the pattern similarity of each point, along each path, to a weighted sum of its successor points within predictive horizons of different scales. We found that anterior PFC showed the largest predictive horizons, posterior hippocampus the smallest, with the anterior hippocampus and orbitofrontal regions in between. Our findings offer novel insights into how cognitive maps support hierarchical planning at multiple scales. Whenever we navigate the world, we represent our journey at multiple horizons: from our immediate surroundings to our distal goal. How are such cognitive maps at different horizons simultaneously represented in the brain? Here, we applied a reinforcement learning-based analysis to neuroimaging data acquired while participants virtually navigated their hometown. We investigated neural patterns in the hippocampus and PFC, key cognitive map regions. We uncovered predictive representations with multiscale horizons in prefrontal and hippocampal gradients, with the longest predictive horizons in anterior PFC and the shortest in posterior hippocampus. These findings provide empirical support for the computational hypothesis that multiscale neural representations guide goal-directed navigation. This advances our understanding of hierarchical planning in everyday navigation of realistic distances.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available