Publications by authors named "P Baraduc"

Article Synopsis
  • The primate posterior parietal cortex (PPC) processes visual space for navigation, while the hippocampus (HPC) creates a memory-based map of the environment.
  • A study of macaques navigating a virtual maze revealed that neurons in both PPC and HPC showed spatial selectivity, indicating a link between visual cues and self-positioning.
  • Key neuron populations, responsive to saccades and fixations, contributed to navigation tasks, and both regions even anticipated landmarks before they became visible, suggesting a shared understanding of spatial layout.
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Language processing is a highly integrative function, intertwining linguistic operations (processing the language code intentionally used for communication) and extra-linguistic processes (e.g., attention monitoring, predictive inference, long-term memory).

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The hippocampus is a neural structure central to the formation of memories and wayfinding. To understand the neural mechanisms at work during memory formation over multiple episodes, Electrophysiological recordings show that neurons in the macaque hippocampus encode complex conjunctions of traits relevant to the navigational task during virtual navigation. While a majority encode environment-specific cues, about one third exhibit correlated firing across different environments sharing the same spatial structure.

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Concept cells in the human hippocampus encode the meaning conveyed by stimuli over their perceptual aspects. Here we investigate whether analogous cells in the macaque can form conceptual schemas of spatial environments. Each day, monkeys were presented with a familiar and a novel virtual maze, sharing a common schema but differing by surface features (landmarks).

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