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Behavior determines the hippocampal spatial mapping of a multisensory environment

Brad A. Radvansky, Jun Young Oh, Jason R. Climer, Daniel A. Dombeck

2021Cell Reports64 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Animals behave in multisensory environments guided by various modalities of spatial information. Mammalian navigation engages a cognitive map of space in the hippocampus. Yet it is unknown whether and how this map incorporates multiple modalities of spatial information. Here, we establish two behavioral tasks in which mice navigate the same multisensory virtual environment by either pursuing a visual landmark or tracking an odor gradient. These tasks engage different proportions of visuo-spatial and olfacto-spatial mapping CA1 neurons and different population-level representations of each sensory-spatial coordinate. Switching between tasks results in global remapping. In a third task, mice pursue a target of varying sensory modality, and this engages modality-invariant neurons mapping the abstract behaviorally relevant coordinate irrespective of its physical modality. These findings demonstrate that the hippocampus does not necessarily map space as one coherent physical variable but as a combination of sensory and abstract reference frames determined by the subject's behavioral goal.

Topics & Concepts

Stimulus modalityCognitive mapModality (human–computer interaction)LandmarkSensory systemSpatial cognitionComputer scienceNeurosciencePopulationSpatial memorySpatial relationSpatial analysisModalitiesCognitionSalience (neuroscience)Place cellHippocampal formationArtificial intelligenceCommunicationPsychologyGeographyMedicineSociologyRemote sensingSocial scienceEnvironmental healthWorking memoryMemory and Neural MechanismsOlfactory and Sensory Function StudiesBiochemical Analysis and Sensing Techniques