Publication | Closed Access
Dissociation of the effects of bilateral lesions of the dorsal hippocampus and parietal cortex on path integration in the rat.
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Citations
48
References
2001
Year
Parietal CortexNeuropsychologyBrain MechanismCognitionBrain OrganizationReference PlaceSocial SciencesDorsal HippocampusMemoryNeurologyCognitive NeuroscienceCognitive ScienceBrain StructureCortical RemodelingNervous SystemSynaptic PlasticityNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomySensorimotor TransformationProcedural MemoryNeuroscienceSpatial CognitionCentral Nervous SystemHoming TaskBilateral LesionsMedicine
Rodents are able to rely on self-motion (idiothetic) cues and navigate toward a reference place by path integration. The authors tested the effects of dorsal hippocampal and parietal lesions in a homing task to dissociate the respective roles of the hippocampus and the parietal cortex in path integration. Hippocampal rats exhibited a strong deficit in learning the basic task. Parietal rats displayed a performance impairment as a function of the complexity of their outward paths when the food was placed at varying locations. These results suggest that the parietal cortex plays a specific role in path integration and in the processing of idiothetic information, whereas the hippocampus is involved in the calibration of space used by the path integration system.
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