AI Article Synopsis

  • Grid cells in the entorhinal cortex help track an individual's location by integrating environmental cues and signals from the body, which also contribute to our sense of self.
  • Researchers investigated whether illusory changes in self-location, induced by visuo-tactile stimulation without traditional navigation, could trigger grid cell-like representations in the brain.
  • The study found that these perceived changes in self-location can activate grid cell-like activity in a manner similar to traditional navigation, suggesting that our brain uses similar mechanisms for both sensory cues and body perception when determining location.

Article Abstract

Grid cells in the entorhinal cortex (EC) encode an individual's location in space, integrating both environmental and multisensory bodily cues. Notably, body-derived signals are also primary signals for the sense of self. While studies have demonstrated that continuous application of visuo-tactile bodily stimuli can induce perceptual shifts in self-location, it remains unexplored whether these illusory changes suffice to trigger grid cell-like representation (GCLR) within the EC, and how this compares to GCLR during conventional virtual navigation. To address this, we systematically induced illusory drifts in self-location toward controlled directions using visuo-tactile bodily stimulation, while maintaining the subjects' visual viewpoint fixed (absent conventional virtual navigation). Subsequently, we evaluated the corresponding GCLR in the EC through functional MRI analysis. Our results reveal that illusory changes in perceived self-location (independent of changes in environmental navigation cues) can indeed evoke entorhinal GCLR, correlating in strength with the magnitude of perceived self-location, and characterized by similar grid orientation as during conventional virtual navigation in the same virtual room. These data demonstrate that the same grid-like representation is recruited when navigating based on environmental, mainly visual cues, or when experiencing illusory forward drifts in self-location, driven by perceptual multisensory bodily cues.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10962966PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2315758121DOI Listing

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