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Spatial Cognition

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Title: Spatial Cognition


1
Spatial Cognition
  • Navigation Finding the way to a goal
  • Discriminate different headings (need a sense of
    direction)
  • External directional reference sun, magnetic
    field, landmarks
  • Internal directional reference
    vestibular/inertial cues
  • Determine the correct heading (need a sense of
    position)
  • Path integration
  • Knowledge of familiar landmarks in home range
  • Geographical positioning system (e.g., position
    relative to large-scale coordinate system defined
    by global geophysical features)--migratory birds,
    whales, turtles

2
Spatial Cognition and Navigation
  • Navigational Processes That Use Internally
    Represented Spatial Knowledge
  • Path integration
  • Sun compass
  • Landmarks cognitive maps

3
Path integration a sense of position
  • Ants travel straight path home after circuitous
    outward path
  • We can exclude use of odor trails, visual
    beacons, or memory of outward path
  • Instead, ants compute direct homeward path based
    on measurements of directions and distances
    traveled on outward path (Wehner et al.)

Food
Homeward path
Nest
4
More on PI
5
Sun Compass and Memory in Bees
The basic task
http//www.scottcamazine.com/photos/ BeeBehavior/i
mages/06waggleDance_jpg.jpg
  • Bees encode (allocentric?) flight direction in
    dances
  • As sun moves, dances change
  • Dances change even when bees cant see sun (thus
    compensate by memory)
  • Reference for memory landmarks (Dyer Gould
    1981 Dyer Dickinson 1996)

6
Celestial compasses birds and bees
  • Pattern of solar movement
  • Non-linear over day
  • Varies with season and latitude
  • Animals learn current, local pattern of solar
    movement
  • Learning not just a list of time-linked solar
    positions, but a function that can be used to
    find unknown positions of the sun.

Training
7
Landmarks Cognitive Maps
From Tolman, EC 1948 Cognitive maps of rats and
men. Psychol Rev 40 40-60.
8
What does it mean to have a cognitive map?
  • One operational definition a representation of
    spatial relationships that enables computation of
    novel shortcuts between known locations (O'Keefe
    Nadel 1978. The hippocampus as a cognitive map)
  • Alternative hypotheses
  • Route memory (A--gt B already familiar)
  • Recognize familiar landmarks associated with
    goal, even if from novel vantage point

Task get from A to B, having experienced routes
to A and B separately
9
Learning local landmarks
Insects can pinpoint locations they need to find
again by learning arrangement of surrounding
landmarks HOW?
Niko Tinbergen (1938)
10
Learning local landmarks
Bees match visual image learned on previous
trips Find best match given all available
information
But bees have some flexibility in approach path.
They dont follow stereotyped route, which
Gallistel takes as evidence of generalized map
Landmark
Enlarge single landmark to match view, bees have
to move back
(Bartlett Dyer in prep)
11
Algorithm snapshot model
Insect records image of landmarks seen at goal
(after Cartwright and Collett 1983)
Is this evidence for a map?
Vardy www.scs.carleton.ca/avardy/
misc/engrSeminar/engrSeminar.pd
12
Robotic simulations
Source Möller, R., Universität Bielefeld
http//www.ti.uni-bielefeld.de/html/people/moeller
/analog.html
13
But is this really what bees do?
14
A simpler model?
  • Bees encode angles (and distances) of landmarks
    may be encoded in egocentric, not allocentric,
    reference frame
  • Weak evidence for a highly flexible computational
    strategy for using landmarks to fly to goal
  • Nevertheless, bees do behave as if they can
    recognize familiar landmarks from novel vantage
    points
  • Also, bees can use familiar landmarks encountered
    in unexpected context

15
What does it mean to have a cognitive map?
  • One operational definition a representation of
    spatial relationships that enables computation of
    novel shortcuts between known locations (O'Keefe
    Nadel 1978. The hippocampus as a cognitive map)
  • Alternative hypotheses
  • Route memory (A--gt B already familiar)
  • Recognize familiar landmarks associated with
    goal, even if from novel vantage point

Task get from A to B, having experienced routes
to A and B separately
16
Do insects have cognitive map or something else?
From Dyer 1991
17
Varieties of cognitive maps? (Gallistel 1990)
Broader Definition (Gallistel 1990) A cognitive
map is a record in the central nervous system of
macroscopic geometric relations among surfaces in
the environment used to plan movements through
the environment. A central question is what type
of geometric relations a map encodes.
  • Specific issues
  • Spatial scale (local vs. home-range)
  • Geometric content (metric, topological)
  • Reference frame (egocentric/view-dependent vs.
    allocentric/view-independent)
  • Evidence
  • People short cuts in cities and VR (errors)
    mixed evidence contents of underlying map
  • Rodents most studies on local scale mixed
    evidence on contents
  • Insects on local and home-range scale--metric,
    egocentric

18
Varieties of cognitive maps?
Type 1
Type 2
Type 3
Most rodent research
  • Computational models of cognitive maps need to
    specify geometric contents (angles, distances,
    routes, nodes), reference frames, and operations
    performed on stored information?
  • Humans, but not insects, form Type 3 maps, but
    insects can flexibly use snapshots and route maps
  • Big question is whether map-learning is
    viewpoint-dependent or viewpoint-independent

19
Toward the implementational level
Is the hippocampus the locus of the cognitive map
of mammals?
  • Some evidence
  • Input from integrative sensory areas
  • Output to neocortex
  • Lesion studies suggest role in memory

Rat brain
20
Hippocampus and spatial cognition
1. Lesion experiments (rats birds) selective
effect on spatial memory
2. Comparisons of hippocampus size correlation
between HC size and reliance on spatial memory
3. Functional neuroimaging (humans)
4. Place cells
21
Place Cells
Rat with recording apparatus
Rat in arena
22
Place Cells (cont'd)
Rat put in dark and then rotated slowly relative
to featureless arena causes shift in place field
Conspicuous landmark is rotated, causing shift in
place field
Place fields are referenced to internal and
external coordinates
23
Some properties of hippocampal place cells that
imply role in spatial cognition
  • Highly stable firing fields in constant
    environment
  • Can be established in total darkness (referenced
    to vestibular cues)
  • Can be linked to visual cues, and then track
    visual cues
  • Individual cells can have different place fields
    in different environments
  • Ensemble of cells encodes map of familiar
    environment
  • BUT there is no obvious way in which this system
    corresponds to computational models of cognitive
    map based on behavioral evidence. For example..

24
Problems with the "hippocampus-as-cognitive-map"
hypothesis
  • May not generalize to humans, because hippocampus
    is known to play role in non-spatial episodic
    memory in humans (but see OKeefe)
  • Place cell ensemble in hippocampus is not enough
    to account for spatial behavior.encodes current
    location, but not goals, for example (Andre
    Fenton)
  • Even in animals, hippocampus is involved in
    non-spatial tasks (e.g., transitive inference)
  • Place cells seem to encode something more than
    just "place"

25
Transitive inference non-spatial function of
hippocampus in rats
  • Rat chooses one odor over another

IF A gt B gt C gt D gt E, then. A gt C
(or D or E) B gt D (or E)
26
Place cells encode more than just placerole for
hippocampus in episodic memory?
Rats are trained on alternating T-maze
Wood ER, Dudchenko PA, Robitsek RJ, Eichenbaum H
Hippocampal neurons encode information about
different types of memory episodes occurring in
the same location. Neuron 2000 27 623-633
27
Context-specific activity of place cells
A cell that fires in a particular place, but much
more rapidly when a right turn is coming up
Wood ER, Dudchenko PA, Robitsek RJ, Eichenbaum H
Hippocampal neurons encode information about
different types of memory episodes occurring in
the same location. Neuron 2000 27 623-633
28
Episodic Memory in Animals?
Episodic Memory in Birds where did I put that
worm and when did I put it there?
http//freespace.virgin.net/cliff.buckton/Birding/
California/Calif17.jpg
Clayton Dickinson 1998
29
Interpretations for role of hippocampus in
spatial cognition and memory generally
  • Spatial and non-spatial episodic memories involve
    different processes hippocampus does them both,
    and has evolved to become more specialized for
    episodic memory in primates compared with rodents
    (Jacobs Schwenk)
  • All experience has a spatial component, and
    hippocampus participates in formation/use of
    episodic memory because of its role in processing
    spatial information processing (O'Keefe)
  • Spatial cognition involves processes that are
    also required in encoding certain other kinds of
    relations among stimuli hippocampus plays a more
    general role that leads it to participate in
    spatial as well as certain non-spatial tasks
    (Eichenbaum)

30
Where does this leave the search for neural
implementation of cognitive map?
  • Hypotheses
  • Hippocampus is the cognitive map (OKeefe)
  • Cognitive map (sensu Tolman and O'Keefe Nadel)
    is elsewhere, but uses output from hippocampus
  • Cognitive map is indeed an important function of
    hippocampus, but computations that hippocampus
    carries out are very different from those
    developed on the basis of behavioral
    observations these computations support
    functions other than spatial encoding (Eichenbaum
    and colleagues)
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