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Hippocampal spatial view cells for memory and navigation, and their underlying connectivity in humans

期刊

HIPPOCAMPUS
卷 33, 期 5, 页码 533-572

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hipo.23467

关键词

concept cells in humans and macaques; episodic memory; hippocampus; navigation; parahippocampal scene area; place cells; spatial view cells

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Hippocampal and parahippocampal gyrus spatial view neurons in primates respond to spatial location and have relatively invariant responses in terms of retinal position and eye position. These spatial view cells are formed by self-organized combinations of feature inputs. They play a key role in episodic memory and navigation.
Hippocampal and parahippocampal gyrus spatial view neurons in primates respond to the spatial location being looked at. The representation is allocentric, in that the responses are to locations out there in the world, and are relatively invariant with respect to retinal position, eye position, head direction, and the place where the individual is located. The underlying connectivity in humans is from ventromedial visual cortical regions to the parahippocampal scene area, leading to the theory that spatial view cells are formed by combinations of overlapping feature inputs self-organized based on their closeness in space. Thus, although spatial view cells represent where for episodic memory and navigation, they are formed by ventral visual stream feature inputs in the parahippocampal gyrus in what is the parahippocampal scene area. A second where driver of spatial view cells are parietal inputs, which it is proposed provide the idiothetic update for spatial view cells, used for memory recall and navigation when the spatial view details are obscured. Inferior temporal object what inputs and orbitofrontal cortex reward inputs connect to the human hippocampal system, and in macaques can be associated in the hippocampus with spatial view cell where representations to implement episodic memory. Hippocampal spatial view cells also provide a basis for navigation to a series of viewed landmarks, with the orbitofrontal cortex reward inputs to the hippocampus providing the goals for navigation, which can then be implemented by hippocampal connectivity in humans to parietal cortex regions involved in visuomotor actions in space. The presence of foveate vision and the highly developed temporal lobe for object and scene processing in primates including humans provide a basis for hippocampal spatial view cells to be key to understanding episodic memory in the primate and human hippocampus, and the roles of this system in primate including human navigation.

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