Publication | Closed Access
Visual and vestibular influences on head-direction cells in the anterior thalamus of the rat.
134
Citations
2
References
1996
Year
Angular Motion InformationMotor ControlPeripheral Vestibular SystemSocial SciencesCentral Vestibular SystemNeural MechanismKinematicsHealth SciencesCognitive ScienceVestibular SystemHead-direction CellsSensorimotor IntegrationAnterior ThalamusVisual PathwayVision ResearchNervous SystemVertebrate VisionVestibular InfluencesMomentary Directional HeadingVestibular NeuroscienceNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomySensorimotor TransformationPhysiologyEye TrackingNeuroscienceCentral Nervous System
As a rat navigates through space, head-direction cells provide an ongoing signal of its momentary directional heading. This directional signal is thought to be generated, in part, by a dead-reckoning mechanism that uses angular motion information to constantly update the directional representation. This study investigated what kinds of angular motion information might be used for dead reckoning. Anterior thalamic head-direction cells were recorded from rats in a rotatable, cylindrical chamber, which could independently deliver visual motion cues and vestibular cues. Results suggest that both of these angular motion cues have an influence on head-direction cells and may thus be used for dead reckoning. The authors conclude that vestibular and visual movement cues work interactively, along with visual landmarks and motor signals, to determine the directional frame of reference.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1