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J Neurophysiol 92: 2887-2997, 2004. First published June 22, 2004; doi:10.1152/jn.00887.2003
0022-3077/04 $5.00
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Rat Head Direction Cell Responses in Zero-Gravity Parabolic Flight

Jeffrey S. Taube1, Robert W. Stackman2, Jeffrey L. Calton1 and Charles M. Oman3

1Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire 03755; 2Department of Behavioral Neuroscience, Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland, Oregon 97201; and 3Man Vehicle Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139

Submitted 10 September 2003; accepted in final form 16 June 2004

Astronauts working in zero-gravity (0-G) often experience visual reorientation illusions (VRIs). For example, when floating upside down, they commonly misperceive the spacecraft floor as a ceiling and have a reversed sense of direction. Previous studies have identified a population of neurons in the rat's brain that discharge as a function of the rat's head direction (HD) in a gravitationally horizontal plane and is dependent on an intact vestibular system. Our goal was to characterize HD cell discharge under conditions of acute weightlessness. Seven HD cells in the anterior dorsal thalamus were monitored from rats aboard an aircraft in 0-G parabolic flight. Unrestrained rats locomoted in a clear plexiglas rectangular chamber that had wire mesh covering the floor, ceiling, and one wall. The chamber and surrounding visual environment were relatively up-down symmetrical. Each HD cell was recorded across forty 20-s episodes of 0-G. All HD cells maintained a significant direction-specific discharge when the rat was on the chamber floor during the 0-G and also during the hypergravity pull-out periods. Three of five cells also showed direction-specific responses on the wall in 1-G. In contrast, direction-specific discharge was usually not maintained when the rat locomoted on the vertical wall or ceiling in 0-G. The loss of direction-specific firing was accompanied by an overall increase in background firing. However, while the rat was on the ceiling, some cells showed occasional bursts of firing when the rat's head was oriented in directions that were flipped relative to the long axis of symmetry of the chamber compared with the cell's preferred firing direction on the floor. This finding is consistent with what might be expected if the rat had experienced a VRI. These responses indicate that rats maintain a normal allocentric frame of reference in 0-G and 1-G when on the floor, but may lose their sense of directional heading when placed on a wall or ceiling during acute exposures to 0-G.


Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: J. S. Taube, Dept. of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Dartmouth College, 6207 Moore Hall, Hanover, NH 03755 (E-mail: jeffrey.taube{at}dartmouth.edu).




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J. L. Calton and J. S. Taube
Degradation of Head Direction Cell Activity during Inverted Locomotion
J. Neurosci., March 2, 2005; 25(9): 2420 - 2428.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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