Optic flow stimuli update anterodorsal thalamus head direction neuronal activity in rats.

J Neurosci

Laboratory of Physiology of Perception and Action, CNRS-Collège de France, UMR 7152, 75231 Paris Cedex 05, France, Laboratory of Neurobiology of Adaptive Processes, CNRS-University Pierre and Marie Curie, UMR 7102, 75005 Paris, France, and Memolife Laboratory of Excellence, Paris Science and Letters University, 75005, Paris, France.

Published: October 2013

Head direction (HD) neurons fire selectively according to head orientation in the yaw plane relative to environmental landmark cues. Head movements provoke optic field flow signals that enter the vestibular nuclei, indicating head velocity, and hence angular displacements. To test whether optic field flow alone affects the directional firing of HD neurons, rats walked about on a circular platform as a spot array was projected onto the surrounding floor-to-ceiling cylindrical black curtain. Directional responses in the anterodorsal thalamus of four rats remained stable as they moved about with the point field but in the absence of landmark cues. Then, the spherical projector was rotated about its yaw axis at 4.5°/s for ∼90 s. In 27 sessions the mean drift speed of the preferred directions (PDs) was 1.48°/s (SD=0.78°/s; range: 0.15 to 2.88°/s). Thus, optic flow stimulation entrained PDs, albeit at drift speeds slower than the field rotation. This could be due to conflicts with vestibular, motor command, and efferent copy signals. After field rotation ended, 20/27 PDs drifted back to within 45° of the initial values over several minutes, generally following the shortest path to return to the initial value. Poststimulation drifts could change speed and/or direction, with mean speeds of 0.68±0.64°/s (range 0 to 1.36°/s). Since the HD cell pathway (containing anterodorsal thalamus) is the only known projection of head direction information to entorhinal grid cells and hippocampal place cells, yaw plane optic flow signals likely influence representations in this spatial reference coordinate system for orientation and navigation.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6618532PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2698-13.2013DOI Listing

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