Journal
JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 26, Issue 16, Pages 4266-4276Publisher
SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4353-05.2006
Keywords
hippocampus; head direction; path integration; entorhinal cortex; place cells; navigation
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Funding
- NIMH NIH HHS [MH59932] Funding Source: Medline
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Electrophysiological recording studies in the dorsocaudal region of medial entorhinal cortex ( dMEC) of the rat reveal cells whose spatial firing fields show a remarkably regular hexagonal grid pattern ( Fyhn et al., 2004; Hafting et al., 2005). We describe a symmetric, locally connected neural network, or spin glass model, that spontaneously produces a hexagonal grid of activity bumps on a two-dimensional sheet of units. The spatial firing fields of the simulated cells closely resemble those of dMEC cells. A collection of grids with different scales and/or orientations forms a basis set for encoding position. Simulations show that the animal's location can easily be determined from the population activity pattern. Introducing an asymmetry in the model allows the activity bumps to be shifted in any direction, at a rate proportional to velocity, to achieve path integration. Furthermore, information about the structure of the environment can be superimposed on the spatial position signal by modulation of the bump activity levels without significantly interfering with the hexagonal periodicity of firing fields. Our results support the conjecture of Hafting et al. (2005) that an attractor network in dMEC may be the source of path integration information afferent to hippocampus.
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