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SeminarPast EventNeuroscience

Brain circuits for spatial navigation

Ann Hermundstad, Ila Fiete, Barbara Webb

Prof

Janelia Research Campus; MIT; University of Edinburgh

Schedule
Friday, November 29, 2024

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Schedule

Friday, November 29, 2024

3:00 PM Europe/Vienna

Host: Brain Prize Webinar Series 2024

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Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Original Event

View source

Host

Brain Prize Webinar Series 2024

Duration

70 minutes

Abstract

In this webinar on spatial navigation circuits, three researchers—Ann Hermundstad, Ila Fiete, and Barbara Webb—discussed how diverse species solve navigation problems using specialized yet evolutionarily conserved brain structures. Hermundstad illustrated the fruit fly’s central complex, focusing on how hardwired circuit motifs (e.g., sinusoidal steering curves) enable rapid, flexible learning of goal-directed navigation. This framework combines internal heading representations with modifiable goal signals, leveraging activity-dependent plasticity to adapt to new environments. Fiete explored the mammalian head-direction system, demonstrating how population recordings reveal a one-dimensional ring attractor underlying continuous integration of angular velocity. She showed that key theoretical predictions—low-dimensional manifold structure, isometry, uniform stability—are experimentally validated, underscoring parallels to insect circuits. Finally, Webb described honeybee navigation, featuring path integration, vector memories, route optimization, and the famous waggle dance. She proposed that allocentric velocity signals and vector manipulation within the central complex can encode and transmit distances and directions, enabling both sophisticated foraging and inter-bee communication via dance-based cues.

Topics

activity-dependent plasticityallocentric signalsbrain circuitscentral complexhead-direction systempath integrationsinusoidal steeringspatial navigationvector memories

About the Speaker

Ann Hermundstad, Ila Fiete, Barbara Webb

Prof

Janelia Research Campus; MIT; University of Edinburgh

Contact & Resources

No additional contact information available

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