Publication | Closed Access
Representation of Three-Dimensional Space in the Hippocampus of Flying Bats
436
Citations
24
References
2013
Year
Confined 3DDevelopmental Cognitive NeuroscienceBrain MechanismPlace CellsBrain OrganizationSensory SystemsSocial SciencesVolumetric SpaceNeural MechanismNeurodynamicsMotor NeuroscienceCognitive NeuroscienceCognitive ScienceNervous SystemBrain CircuitryNeuroanatomyComputational NeuroscienceThree-dimensional SpaceSpatial CognitionNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemMedicine
Many animals, on air, water, or land, navigate in three-dimensional (3D) environments, yet it remains unclear how brain circuits encode the animal's 3D position. We recorded single neurons in freely flying bats, using a wireless neural-telemetry system, and studied how hippocampal place cells encode 3D volumetric space during flight. Individual place cells were active in confined 3D volumes, and in >90% of the neurons, all three axes were encoded with similar resolution. The 3D place fields from different neurons spanned different locations and collectively represented uniformly the available space in the room. Theta rhythmicity was absent in the firing patterns of 3D place cells. These results suggest that the bat hippocampus represents 3D volumetric space by a uniform and nearly isotropic rate code.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1