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SPATIAL COGNITION

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Title: SPATIAL COGNITION Author: Andrea Chiba Last modified by: Andrea Chiba Created Date: 5/14/2004 9:44:23 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SPATIAL COGNITION


1
SPATIAL COGNITION
XXX
2
  • Spatial Cognition is concerned with the
    acquisition, organization, utilization, and
    revision of knowledge about spatial environments.
    These capabilities enable humans to manage basic
    and high-level cognitive tasks in everyday life.

3
SPATIAL COGNITION A Couple Aspects of Spatial
Cognition I. Visuospatial Perception including
"Spatial Awareness" a. Spatial Coordinate
Systems or Spatial Reference Frames. b.
Spatial Feature Integration II. Spatial
Navigation a. spatial cognitive map and route
finding. b. path integration
4
Neuroanatomy of Spatial Cogntion??? A. Ventral
Visual Stream leading downward into the temporal
lobe (inferotemporal cortex - IT). What is it?
B. Dorsal Visual Stream leading upward or
forward into the Parietal Cortex (area PG).Where
is it? Dorsal and Ventral StreamsParallel
systems with substantial interconnectivity.
5
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6
Whats the Parietal Lobe Doing?
  • Attention
  • Neglect
  • Simultanagnosia (in Balints syndrome)
  • Optic Ataxia
  • Spatial representation
  • Apraxia
  • Visuomotor integration
  • Hemisphere diffs

7
Hypothesis Parietal Cortex neurons construct
space by combining multi-sensory modalities with
motor signals.
8
  • VIP Perioral space
  • visual tactile responses
  • Tactile RFs are centered around the mouth
  • VT units have similar movement direction tuning
  • Visual responses can be eye- or head-centered
  • Some visual responses are tuned to movement of an
    object toward a particular portion of the face,
    independent of gaze
  • Some visual responses are sensitive only to
    stimuli that are near the face (lt 5cm)
  • Connected to F4, which controls head/mouth
    movements
  • Head movt / grasping with mouth

9
  • AIP Object Shape
  • Visual, motor, and visuomotor responses
  • Visual units are object shape and orientation
    sensitive
  • Motor responses are hand-movement sensitive
  • Deactivation causes grasping deficits
  • Connected to area F5, which is involved in
    grasping
  • Grasping with hand

10
  • MIP Immediate Extrapersonal Space
  • Visual, somato, and bimodal units
  • Pure somato units have RFs on the hand
  • Bimodal units activate strongly during reaching
  • Some pure visual units show stronger responses
    when a target is within reaching distance
  • Bimodal RFs are located near each other (tactile
    RF on the hand visual RF near hand)
  • Visual RF moves with hand!
  • Visual RF expands when monkey uses a tool for
    reaching!
  • Reaching with arm

11
"Spatial Awareness" - Posterior Parietal Cortex
LIP (lateral intraparietal)- Neurons respond to
the onset of visual stimuli. Visual responses
are enhanced by requiring that the monkey
attends to the stimulus. Prolonged responses
occur when the monkey must remember the location
of in which the stimulus occurred. Neurons
contribute to the updating of the internal
image. "Eye-centered spatial representation"
12
Parietal Cortex Neurons in RatsReflect Route
traversals
13
Behavioral Correlates of PC Neurons
14
For parietal neurons, high correlations were
observed between outbound and inbound unit
activity vectors aligned according to behavioral
sequence (first versus second traces rbeh), but
were negative when aligned according to the
sequence of spatial positions encountered (first
versus third traces rspace). The opposite
pattern was observed for the CA1 hippocampal
neuron.
15
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16
Recording Cells in the Hipocampus(Does it have a
spatial map?)
17
Hippocampal Cell Layers
18
Hippocampal Cell Layers
19
Electrodes Finding Cells
20
Computer Monitoring of Activity After
Amplification
21
Hippocampal Pyramidal Cell Complex Spike
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24
Place cells are stable when the entire
environment rotates as long as the animal is not
disoriented during the rotation.
25
Place Field on Circular Track
26
Place Field Expansion
27
Place Field Expansion
28
Spatial Grid Cells in Entorhinal Cortex
29
Grid Cells
Tessellation of a city map by squares provides
information about position, distance and
direction, allowing specific places to be easily
located. b, Hafting et al.1 find that as a rat
explores an experimental enclosure, the discharge
rate of a neuron in the dorsocaudal medial
entorhinal cortex increases at regular intervals
corresponding to the vertices of a triangular
grid. c, Integration of information from several
grid components (that is, from the outputs of
several neurons) can increase the spatial
resolution of the environment. Three triangular
grids are represented here, with red displaced
and blue rotated relative to a neuron grid shown
in black. GR
30
GRID CELLS DONT SCALE
31
GRID Cells Align to External Cues, but persist
when the cues are removed.
32
Grids persist in the dark!
33
GRID Cells Code similarly in different
environments
34
Navigational-related structural change in the
Hippocampi of Taxi Drivers
Maguire, Gadian, Johnsrude, Good, Ashburner,
Frackowiak Frith.
Presented by Jill Campbell, Monica Chattha, James
Collins Kellie Gray and Kristen Lai Fatt
35
Background
  • The hippocampus is KNOWN to be involved in
    spatial navigation cognition in animals
  • ? in relative hippocampal volume in small mammals
    and birds that engage in behaviour requiring
    spatial memory (i.e. food storing)
  • ? in hippocampal volumes specifically during
    seasons when demand for spatial ability greatest
    species specific
  • ? tendency for animal hippocampi to undergo
    structural changes in response to behaviour
    requiring spatial memory

36
Hippocampal refresher
37
Background
  • The hippocampus is strongly BELIEVED to play a
    similar role in humans
  • structural brain differences b/w distinct groups
    of subjects documented (ex. Males vs. females,
    musicians vs. non-musicians)
  • lesion work and functional neuroimaging have
    confirmed the involvement of human hippocampus in
    spatial memory and navigation but not its precise
    role
  • ? differences in brain morphology predetermined
    OR due to plastic change in response to
    environmental stimulation??

38
Hypothesis
? In healthy humans, the hippocampus will be the
most likely brain region to show physical changes
associated with extensive navigation
39
Analysis of volumes for 3 sections of the
hippocampus
Anterior Body Posterior
Volume Controllarger No difference b/n grps Taxi grp larger
Hemisphere Right side was larger (for control) Right side was larger (for control) insignificant
Interaction none none none
40
Changes with Navigation Experience
  • The more time spent being a taxi driver, the
    larger the right posterior hippocampus
  • The more time spent being a taxi driver, the
    smaller the anterior hippocampus

41
Implications
  • Plasticity of hippocampus results from spatial
    experience
  • Extensive spatial experience causes growth of
    posterior hippocampus
  • Trade off between size of Anterior and Posterior
    hippocampus
  • Posterior HC storage of previously learned
    spatial information in humans
  • Anterior HC encoding of new spatial
    environment in humans
  • ? If this is true then Taxi Drivers should be
    slower at learning spatial orientation of
    completely new unique environments
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