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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 83 No. 1 January 2000, pp. 393-405
Copyright ©2000 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire 03755
Stackman, Robert W.,
Matthew L. Tullman, and
Jeffrey S. Taube.
Maintenance of Rat Head Direction Cell Firing During Locomotion
in the Vertical Plane. J. Neurophysiol. 83: 393-405, 2000. Previous studies have identified a subset of
neurons in the rat anterodorsal thalamus (ADN) that encode head
direction (HD) in absolute space and may be involved in navigation.
These HD cells discharge selectively when the rat points its head in a specific direction (the preferred firing direction) in the horizontal plane. HD cells are typically recorded during free movement about a
single horizontal surface. The current experiment examined how HD cell
firing was influenced by 1) locomotion in the vertical plane and 2) locomotion on two different horizontal
surfaces separated in height. Rats were trained in a cylindrical
enclosure containing a single polarizing cue card attached to the
cylinder wall, covering ~100° of arc. The enclosure contained two
horizontal surfaces: the cylinder floor and an annulus around the
cylinder top 76 cm above the floor. A 90° vertical mesh ladder that
could be affixed at any angular position on the cylinder wall allowed
the rats to locomote back and forth between the two horizontal
surfaces. Rats were trained to retrieve food pellets on the cylinder
floor as well as climb the mesh ladder to retrieve food pellets on the annulus. HD cell activity was monitored as the rat traversed the horizontal and vertical surfaces of the apparatus. When the angular position of the mesh corresponded to the cell's preferred firing direction, the HD cells maintained their peak discharge rate as the rat
climbed up the mesh, but did not fire when the rat
climbed down the mesh. In contrast, when the mesh was positioned 180° opposite the preferred firing direction, HD cells did not fire when the
rat climbed up the mesh, but exhibited maximal firing when the rat
climbed down the mesh. When the mesh was placed 90 or 270° from the
preferred firing direction, HD cells exhibited background firing rates
during climbing up or down the mesh. While preferred firing directions
were maintained between the two horizontal surfaces, peak firing rate
increased significantly (~30%) on the annulus as compared with the
cylinder floor. These data demonstrate that HD cells continue to
discharge in the vertical plane if the vertical locomotion began with
the rat's orientation corresponding to the preferred firing direction.
One model consistent with these data are that HD cells define the
horizontal reference frame as the animal's plane of locomotion.
Further, we propose that HD cell firing, as viewed within a
three-dimensional coordinate system, can be characterized as the
surface of a hemitorus.
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