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Seminar✓ Recording AvailableNeuroscience

Mice identify subgoals locations through an action-driven mapping process

Philip Shamash

Branco lab, Sainsbury Wellcome Centre

Schedule
Wednesday, December 8, 2021

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Schedule

Wednesday, December 8, 2021

6:00 PM Europe/Berlin

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Host: WWNeuRise

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Recording provided by the organiser.

Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Original Event

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Host

WWNeuRise

Duration

35 minutes

Abstract

Mammals instinctively explore and form mental maps of their spatial environments. Models of cognitive mapping in neuroscience mostly depict map-learning as a process of random or biased diffusion. In practice, however, animals explore spaces using structured, purposeful, sensory-guided actions. We have used threat-evoked escape behavior in mice to probe the relationship between ethological exploratory behavior and abstract spatial cognition. First, we show that in arenas with obstacles and a shelter, mice spontaneously learn efficient multi-step escape routes by memorizing allocentric subgoal locations. Using closed-loop neural manipulations to interrupt running movements during exploration, we next found that blocking runs targeting an obstacle edge abolished subgoal learning. We conclude that mice use an action-driven learning process to identify subgoals, and these subgoals are then integrated into an allocentric map-like representation. We suggest a conceptual framework for spatial learning that is compatible with the successor representation from reinforcement learning and sensorimotor enactivism from cognitive science.

Topics

action-driven learningallocentric representationcognitionexploratory behaviourmulti-step escape routesneural manipulationsspatial cognitionsubgoal learningthreat-evoked escape

About the Speaker

Philip Shamash

Branco lab, Sainsbury Wellcome Centre

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

scholar.google.com/citations

@PShamash

Follow on Twitter/X

twitter.com/PShamash

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