AI Article Synopsis

  • Grid cells in the entorhinal cortex provide a spatial coordinate system that helps individuals understand their location and remember it, featuring unique properties like 60° symmetry and consistent scaling across different environments.
  • Research on humans with entorhinal cortical implants performing navigation tasks has revealed that human grid cells can adapt their activity based on the size and shape of their environment and visual cues.
  • The study indicates that human entorhinal cortical neurons are more flexible than those in rodents, displaying an ability to adjust their scaling and context sensitivity when representing space.

Article Abstract

The spatially periodic activity of grid cells in the entorhinal cortex (EC) of the rodent, primate, and human provides a coordinate system that, together with the hippocampus, informs an individual of its location relative to the environment and encodes the memory of that location. Among the most defining features of grid-cell activity are the 60° rotational symmetry of grids and preservation of grid scale across environments. Grid cells, however, do display a limited degree of adaptation to environments. It remains unclear if this level of environment invariance generalizes to human grid-cell analogs, where the relative contribution of visual input to the multimodal sensory input of the EC is significantly larger than in rodents. Patients diagnosed with nontractable epilepsy who were implanted with entorhinal cortical electrodes performing virtual navigation tasks to memorized locations enabled us to investigate associations between grid-like patterns and environment. Here, we report that the activity of human entorhinal cortical neurons exhibits adaptive scaling in grid period, grid orientation, and rotational symmetry in close association with changes in environment size, shape, and visual cues, suggesting scale invariance of the frequency, rather than the wavelength, of spatially periodic activity. Our results demonstrate that neurons in the human EC represent space with an enhanced flexibility relative to neurons in rodents because they are endowed with adaptive scalability and context dependency.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5410836PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1701352114DOI Listing

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