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Engagement of Neural Circuits Underlying 2D Spatial Navigation in a Rodent Virtual Reality System

Author(s): Aronov, Dmitriy; Tank, David W

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Abstract: Virtual reality (VR) enables precise control of an animal’s environment and otherwise impossible experimental manipulations. Neural activity in navigating rodents has been studied on virtual linear tracks. However, the spatial navigation system’s engagement in complete two-dimensional environments has not been shown. We describe a VR setup for rats, including control software and a large-scale electrophysiology system, which supports 2D navigation by allowing animals to rotate and walk in any direction. The entorhinal-hippocampal circuit, including place cells, grid cells, head direction cells and border cells, showed 2D activity patterns in VR similar to those in the real world. Hippocampal neurons exhibited various remapping responses to changes in the appearance or the shape of the virtual environment, including a novel form in which a VR-induced cue conflict caused remapping to lock to geometry rather than salient cues. These results suggest a general-purpose tool for novel types of experimental manipulations in navigating rats.
Publication Date: 22-Oct-2014
Citation: Aronov, Dmitriy, Tank, David W. (2014). Engagement of Neural Circuits Underlying 2D Spatial Navigation in a Rodent Virtual Reality System. Neuron, 84 (2), 442 - 456. doi:10.1016/j.neuron.2014.08.042
DOI: doi:10.1016/j.neuron.2014.08.042
ISSN: 0896-6273
Pages: 442 - 456
Type of Material: Journal Article
Journal/Proceeding Title: Neuron
Version: Author's manuscript



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