cue card
A Model of the Neural Basis of the Rat's Sense of Direction
In the last decade the outlines of the neural structures subserving the sense of direction have begun to emerge. Several investigations have shed light on the effects of vestibular input and visual input on the head direction representation. In this paper, a model is formulated of the neural mechanisms underlying the head direction system. The model is built out of simple ingredients, depending on nothing more complicated than connectional specificity, attractor dynamics, Hebbian learning, and sigmoidal nonlinearities, but it behaves in a sophisticated way and is consistent with most of the observed properties ofreal head direction cells. In addition it makes a number of predictions that ought to be testable by reasonably straightforward experiments.
Orientational and Geometric Determinants of Place and Head-direction
The model can predict the response ofindividual cells and populations to parametric manipulations of both geometric (e.g.O'Keefe & Burgess, 1996) and orientational (Fenton et aI., 2000a) cues, extending a previous geometric model (Hartley et al., 2000). It provides a functional description of how these cells' spatial responses are derived from the rat's environment and makes easily testable quantitative predictions. Consideration ofthe phenomenon of remapping (Muller & Kubie, 1987; Bostock et aI., 1991) indicates that the model may also be consistent with nonparametric changesin firing, and provides constraints for its future development.
Modeling Interactions of the Rat's Place and Head Direction Systems
Redish, A. David, Touretzky, David S.
We have developed a computational theory of rodent navigation that includes analogs of the place cell system, the head direction system, and path integration. In this paper we present simulation results showing how interactions between the place and head direction systems can account for recent observations about hippocampal place cell responses to doubling and/or rotation of cue cards in a cylindrical arena (Sharp et at.,
Modeling Interactions of the Rat's Place and Head Direction Systems
Redish, A. David, Touretzky, David S.
We have developed a computational theory of rodent navigation that includes analogs of the place cell system, the head direction system, and path integration. In this paper we present simulation results showing how interactions between the place and head direction systems can account for recent observations about hippocampal place cell responses to doubling and/or rotation of cue cards in a cylindrical arena (Sharp et at.,
Modeling Interactions of the Rat's Place and Head Direction Systems
Redish, A. David, Touretzky, David S.
We have developed a computational theory of rodent navigation that includes analogs of the place cell system, the head direction system, and path integration. In this paper we present simulation results showing how interactions between the place and head direction systems can account for recent observations about hippocampal place cell responses to doubling and/or rotation of cue cards in a cylindrical arena (Sharp et at.,
A Model of the Neural Basis of the Rat's Sense of Direction
Skaggs, William E., Knierim, James J., Kudrimoti, Hemant S., McNaughton, Bruce L.
Several investigations have shed light on the effects of vestibular input and visual input on the head direction representation. In this paper, a model is formulated of the neural mechanisms underlying the head direction system. The model is built out of simple ingredients, depending on nothing more complicated than connectional specificity, attractor dynamics, Hebbian learning, and sigmoidal nonlinearities, but it behaves in a sophisticated way and is consistent with most of the observed properties ofreal head direction cells. In addition it makes a number of predictions that ought to be testable by reasonably straightforward experiments.
A Model of the Neural Basis of the Rat's Sense of Direction
Skaggs, William E., Knierim, James J., Kudrimoti, Hemant S., McNaughton, Bruce L.
In the last decade the outlines of the neural structures subserving the sense of direction have begun to emerge. Several investigations have shed light on the effects of vestibular input and visual input on the head direction representation. In this paper, a model is formulated of the neural mechanisms underlying the head direction system. The model is built out of simple ingredients, depending on nothing more complicated than connectional specificity, attractor dynamics, Hebbian learning, and sigmoidal nonlinearities, but it behaves in a sophisticated way and is consistent with most of the observed properties ofreal head direction cells. In addition it makes a number of predictions that ought to be testable by reasonably straightforward experiments.
A Model of the Neural Basis of the Rat's Sense of Direction
Skaggs, William E., Knierim, James J., Kudrimoti, Hemant S., McNaughton, Bruce L.
In the last decade the outlines of the neural structures subserving the sense of direction have begun to emerge. Several investigations have shed light on the effects of vestibular input and visual input on the head direction representation. In this paper, a model is formulated of the neural mechanisms underlying the head direction system. The model is built out of simple ingredients, depending on nothing more complicated than connectional specificity, attractor dynamics, Hebbian learning, and sigmoidal nonlinearities, but it behaves in a sophisticated way and is consistent with most of the observed properties ofreal head direction cells. In addition it makes a number of predictions that ought to be testable by reasonably straightforward experiments.