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Spatial Maps

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spatial maps

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with spatial maps across World Wide.
5 curated items3 ePosters2 Seminars
Updated almost 5 years ago
5 items · spatial maps
5 results
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Linking neural representations of space by multiple attractor networks in the entorhinal cortex and the hippocampus

Yoram Burak
Hebrew University
Dec 8, 2020

In the past decade evidence has accumulated in favor of the hypothesis that multiple sub-networks in the medial entorhinal cortex (MEC) are characterized by low-dimensional, continuous attractor dynamics. Much has been learned about the joint activity of grid cells within a module (a module consists of grid cells that share a common grid spacing), but little is known about the interactions between them. Under typical conditions of spatial exploration in which sensory cues are abundant, all grid-cells in the MEC represent the animal’s position in space and their joint activity lies on a two-dimensional manifold. However, if the grid cells in a single module mechanistically constitute independent attractor networks, then under conditions in which salient sensory cues are absent, errors could accumulate in the different modules in an uncoordinated manner. Such uncoordinated errors would give rise to catastrophic readout errors when attempting to decode position from the joint grid-cell activity. I will discuss recent theoretical works from our group, in which we explored different mechanisms that could impose coordination in the different modules. One of these mechanisms involves coordination with the hippocampus and must be set up such that it operates across multiple spatial maps that represent different environments. The other mechanism is internal to the entorhinal cortex and independent of the hippocampus.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Schemas: events, spaces, semantics, and development

Chris Baldassano
Columbia University
Jun 30, 2020

Understanding and remembering realistic experiences in our everyday lives requires activating many kinds of structured knowledge about the world, including spatial maps, temporal event scripts, and semantic relationships. My recent projects have explored the ways in which we build up this schematic knowledge (during a single experiment and across developmental timescales) and can strategically deploy them to construct event representations that we can store in memory or use to make predictions. I will describe my lab's ongoing work developing new experimental and analysis techniques for conducting functional MRI experiments using narratives, movies, poetry, virtual reality, and "memory experts" to study complex naturalistic schemas.

ePoster

Continuous rotation of allocentric spatial maps in the hippocampus during reorientation

Quinn Lee, Tianmeng Xu, Mark P. Brandon

COSYNE 2025

ePoster

Stability of spatial maps in CA3 axons under affective contextual changes

Albert Miguel Lopez, Carlos Wert Carvajal, Negar Nikbahkt, Martin Pofahl, Lena Johanna Gschossmann, Heinz Beck, Tatjana Tchumatchenko

COSYNE 2025

ePoster

Unique potential of immature adult-born neurons for the remodeling of CA3 spatial maps

Matias Mugnaini, Mariela Trinchero, Alejandro F. Schinder, Veronica Piatti, Emilio Kropff

FENS Forum 2024