4.7 Article

Human brain dynamics in active spatial navigation

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-92246-4

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Australian Research Council (ARC) [DP180100670, DP180100656, DP210101093]
  2. Australia Defence Innovation Hub [P18-650825]
  3. US Office of Naval Research Global [ONRG - NICOP - N62909-19-1-2058]
  4. AFOSR - DST Australian Autonomy Initiative [ID10134]
  5. NSW Defence Innovation Network [DINPP2019 S1-03/09]
  6. NSW State Government of Australia [DINPP2019 S1-03/09]

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Spatial navigation is a complex cognitive process that involves multiple senses and is processed by various brain areas. Previous studies have shown that the retrosplenial complex (RSC) is modulated in a task-related manner during navigation. This study demonstrates evidence of human RSC theta oscillation during active spatial navigation tasks, with pronounced theta power during heading changes, indicating a potential head-direction computation in healthy humans during navigation.
Spatial navigation is a complex cognitive process based on multiple senses that are integrated and processed by a wide network of brain areas. Previous studies have revealed the retrosplenial complex (RSC) to be modulated in a task-related manner during navigation. However, these studies restricted participants' movement to stationary setups, which might have impacted heading computations due to the absence of vestibular and proprioceptive inputs. Here, we present evidence of human RSC theta oscillation (4-8 Hz) in an active spatial navigation task where participants actively ambulated from one location to several other points while the position of a landmark and the starting location were updated. The results revealed theta power in the RSC to be pronounced during heading changes but not during translational movements, indicating that physical rotations induce human RSC theta activity. This finding provides a potential evidence of head-direction computation in RSC in healthy humans during active spatial navigation.

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