| Literature DB >> 25470055 |
Arseny Finkelstein1, Dori Derdikman2, Alon Rubin1, Jakob N Foerster1, Liora Las1, Nachum Ulanovsky1.
Abstract
Navigation requires a sense of direction ('compass'), which in mammals is thought to be provided by head-direction cells, neurons that discharge when the animal's head points to a specific azimuth. However, it remains unclear whether a three-dimensional (3D) compass exists in the brain. Here we conducted neural recordings in bats, mammals well-adapted to 3D spatial behaviours, and found head-direction cells tuned to azimuth, pitch or roll, or to conjunctive combinations of 3D angles, in both crawling and flying bats. Head-direction cells were organized along a functional-anatomical gradient in the presubiculum, transitioning from 2D to 3D representations. In inverted bats, the azimuth-tuning of neurons shifted by 180°, suggesting that 3D head direction is represented in azimuth × pitch toroidal coordinates. Consistent with our toroidal model, pitch-cell tuning was unimodal, circular, and continuous within the available 360° of pitch. Taken together, these results demonstrate a 3D head-direction mechanism in mammals, which could support navigation in 3D space.Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25470055 DOI: 10.1038/nature14031
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962