4.8 Article

Olfactory landmarks and path integration converge to form a cognitive spatial map

Journal

NEURON
Volume 109, Issue 24, Pages 4036-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2021.09.055

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Funding

  1. Helen Hay Whitney Foundation
  2. NSF NeuroNex [DBI-1707398]
  3. Gatsby Charitable Foundation
  4. Simons Collaboration for the Global Brain
  5. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  6. Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI)

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The study demonstrates that odor cues can act as landmarks, enhancing navigation and extending cognitive spatial maps, indicating an interactive mechanism between path integration and odor landmarks.
The convergence of internal path integration and external sensory landmarks generates a cognitive spatial map in the hippocampus. We studied how localized odor cues are recognized as landmarks by recording the activity of neurons in CA1 during a virtual navigation task. We found that odor cues enriched place cell representations, dramatically improving navigation. Presentation of the same odor at different locations generated distinct place cell representations. An odor cue at a proximal location enhanced the local place cell density and also led to the formation of place cells beyond the cue. This resulted in the recognition of a second, more distal odor cue as a distinct landmark, suggesting an iterative mechanism for extending spatial representations into unknown territory. Our results establish that odors can serve as landmarks, motivating a model in which path integration and odor landmarks interact sequentially and iteratively to generate cognitive spatial maps over long distances.

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