4.8 Article

A Goal Direction Signal in the Human Entorhinal/Subicular Region

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 25, Issue 1, Pages 87-92

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2014.11.001

Keywords

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Funding

  1. James S. McDonnell Foundation
  2. Wellcome Trust

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Navigating to a safe place, such as a home or nest, is a fundamental behavior for all complex animals. Determining the direction to such goals is a crucial first step in navigation. Surprisingly, little is known about how or where in the brain this goal direction signal'' is represented. In mammals, head-direction cells'' are thought to support this process, but despite 30 years of research, no evidence for a goal direction representation has been reported [1, 2]. Here, we used fMRI to record neural activity while participants made goal direction judgments based on a previously learned virtual environment. We applied multivoxel pattern analysis [3-5] to these data and found that the human entorhinal/subicular region contains a neural representation of intended goal direction. Furthermore, the neural pattern expressed for a given goal direction matched the pattern expressed when simply facing that same direction. This suggests the existence of a shared neural representation of both goal and facing direction. We argue that this reflects a mechanism based on head-direction populations that simulate future goal directions during route planning [6]. Our data further revealed that the strength of direction information predicts performance. Finally, we found a dissociation between this geocentric information in the entorhinal/subicular region and egocentric direction information in the precuneus.

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