Litcius/Paper detail

Visual objects refine head direction coding

Dominique Siegenthaler, Henry Denny, Sofía Skromne Carrasco, Johanna Luise Mayer, Daniel Levenstein, Adrien Peyrache, Stuart Trenholm, Émilie Macé

2025Science12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Animals use visual objects to guide navigation-related behaviors. However, visual object-preferring areas have yet to be described in the mouse brain, limiting our understanding of how visual objects affect spatial navigation system processing. Using functional ultrasound imaging, we identified brain areas that were preferentially activated by images of objects compared with their scrambled versions. Whereas visual cortex did not show a preference, areas associated with spatial navigation were preferentially activated by visual objects. Electrophysiological recordings in postsubiculum, the cortical head direction (HD) system hub, confirmed a preference for visual objects in both HD cells and fast-spiking interneurons. In freely moving animals, visual objects increased firing rates of HD cells aligned with a visual object but decreased activity in HD cells coding for other directions.

Topics & Concepts

Computer visionVisual cortexCoding (social sciences)LimitingArtificial intelligenceComputer scienceNeural codingElectrophysiologyVisual perceptionN2pcVisual ObjectsNeuroscienceObject (grammar)Brain activity and meditationVisualizationVisual processingVisual systemCommunicationHuman visual system modelVision for perception and vision for actionVisual fieldVisual memoryPattern recognition (psychology)Photic StimulationCognitive neuroscience of visual object recognitionSaliency mapSpatial frequencyHead (geology)ElectroencephalographyAdvanced Image and Video Retrieval TechniquesAdvanced Vision and Imaging