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      Home, head direction stability and grid cell distortion

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      bioRxiv

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          Abstract

          The home is a unique location in the life of humans and animals. Numerous behavioral studies investigating homing indicate that many animals maintain an online representation of the direction of the home, a home vector. Here we placed the rat’s home cage in the arena, while recording neurons in the animal’s parasubiculum and medial entorhinal cortex. From a pellet hoarding paradigm it became evident that the home cage induced locomotion patterns characteristic of homing behaviors. We did not observe home-vector cells. We found that head-direction signals were unaffected by home location. However, grid cells were distorted in the presence of the home cage. While they did not globally remap, single firing fields were translocated towards the home. These effects appeared to be geometrical in nature rather than a home-specific distortion. Our work suggests that medial entorhinal cortex and parasubiculum do not contain an explicit neural representation of the home direction.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          bioRxiv
          April 10 2019
          Article
          10.1101/602771
          b9ad5502-edfa-4acd-92a8-d914a930c68c
          © 2019
          History

          Molecular medicine,Neurosciences
          Molecular medicine, Neurosciences

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