How Bats Remember Directions

Summary: Researchers reveal how a specific group of hippocampal neurons encode the directions to a destination.

Source: Weizmann Institute.

Researchers identify the cells that orient bats – and possibly humans – toward a destination.

Navigating to a destination, whether you are a human or a bat, requires a complex set of calculations and interactions among brain cells. Weizmann Institute of Science researchers working with bats, have now revealed the network of cells that encode the direction of one’s destination. Among other things, their findings may help explain how memory loss and “getting lost” tend to go together in Alzheimer’s patients.

The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded in 2014 for the discovery of place cells and grid cells – neurons in a part of the brain called the hippocampal formation that tell us where we are in relation to our surroundings. When we are on the move, these cells chart our starting point. But the way in which our brains direct us to a specific destination has remained an open question.

Prof. Nachum Ulanovsky and research student Ayelet Sarel of the Weizmann Institute’s Neurobiology Department, working together with their colleagues Drs. Arseny Finkelstein and Liora Las, devised a simple experiment with bats to answer this question. The findings of their research appeared today in Science.

The experiment took place in a special room in which the Egyptian fruit bats that Ulanovsky works with can fly around. Tiny tracking devices attached to the bats enabled the researchers to track their flight paths, on the one hand, and record the activities of the neurons in the area of the hippocampus that deals with navigation, on the other. The bats’ destination: a stand with the fruit they prefer.

Image shows an Egyptian fruit bat.
Egyptian fruit bat. In today’s issue of Science, Sarel et al report on a new functional class of hippocampal neurons in bats, which encode the direction and distance to spatial goals – suggesting a novel neural mechanism for goal-directed navigation. NeuroscienceNews.com image is credited to Steve Gettle.

Around one third of the neurons in a bat’s hippocampus represented the animal’s current position in the flight room. But in addition, some 19% of the cells were engaged in encoding the destination – the beckoning fruit stand. To further understand how this encoding works, Ulanovsky and Sarel then hid the fruit stand behind a screen. The bats’ neurons continued to aim toward the stand – “through the wall” – even though it was hidden from sight. In other words, say the researchers, the direction in which we need to travel to get to our destination is represented in the brain based primarily on our memory, and not, for example, on our sense of vision That is why we can find the coffee shop hidden behind tall buildings, and the bat can find its favorite fruit tree, even when it is beyond a range of hills. It may also explain how injury to the hippocampus, as well as Alzheimer’s disease, often present as getting lost on the way to navigational destinations.

The scientists also identified a group a nerve cells that calculate and encode the distance to a bat’s destination, while some of the cells, they found, encode both direction and distance. “This is a bit like the navigation systems in our cars that give distance and travel time, in addition to directions. The brain has found a simpler way, encoding these in a sort of vector, or ‘arrow’ pointing the way,” says Ulanovsky. “These neurons are continually computing and integrating information on our direction and the distance to our destination.”

About this schizophrenia research article

Funding: Prof. Nachum Ulanovsky’s research is supported by the Lulu P. and David J. Levidow Fund for Alzheimers Diseases and Neuroscience Research; the Adelis Foundation; the Mike and Valeria Rosenbloom through the Mike Rosenbloom Foundation; and the Harold and Faye Liss Foundation.

Source: Weizmann Institute
Image Source: NeuroscienceNews.com image is credited to Steve Gettle.
Original Research: Abstract for “Vectorial representation of spatial goals in the hippocampus of bats” by Ayelet Sarel, Arseny Finkelstein, Liora Las, and Nachum Ulanovsky in Science. Published online January 13 2017 doi:10.1126/science.aak9589

Cite This NeuroscienceNews.com Article

[cbtabs][cbtab title=”MLA”]Weizmann Institute “How Bats Remember Directions.” NeuroscienceNews. NeuroscienceNews, 16 January 2017.
<https://neurosciencenews.com/neurons-bat-directions-5945/>.[/cbtab][cbtab title=”APA”]Weizmann Institute (2017, January 16). How Bats Remember Directions. NeuroscienceNew. Retrieved January 16, 2017 from https://neurosciencenews.com/neurons-bat-directions-5945/[/cbtab][cbtab title=”Chicago”]Weizmann Institute “How Bats Remember Directions.” https://neurosciencenews.com/neurons-bat-directions-5945/ (accessed January 16, 2017).[/cbtab][/cbtabs]


Abstract

Vectorial representation of spatial goals in the hippocampus of bats

To navigate, animals need to represent not only their own position and orientation, but also the location of their goal. Neural representations of an animal’s own position and orientation have been extensively studied. However, it is unknown how navigational goals are encoded in the brain. We recorded from hippocampal CA1 neurons of bats flying in complex trajectories toward a spatial goal. We discovered a subpopulation of neurons with angular tuning to the goal direction. Many of these neurons were tuned to an occluded goal, suggesting that goal-direction representation is memory-based. We also found cells that encoded the distance to the goal, often in conjunction with goal direction. The goal-direction and goal-distance signals make up a vectorial representation of spatial goals, suggesting a previously unrecognized neuronal mechanism for goal-directed navigation.

“Vectorial representation of spatial goals in the hippocampus of bats” by Ayelet Sarel, Arseny Finkelstein, Liora Las, and Nachum Ulanovsky in Science. Published online January 13 2017 doi:10.1126/science.aak9589

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