4.6 Article

Can rodents conceive hyperbolic spaces?

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY INTERFACE
Volume 12, Issue 107, Pages -

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2014.1214

Keywords

grid cells; self-organizing process; space representation; hyperbolic geometry

Funding

  1. EU FET project GRIDMAP [FP7-ICT 600725]

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The grid cells discovered in the rodent medial entorhinal cortex have been proposed to provide a metric for Euclidean space, possibly even hardwired in the embryo. Yet, one class of models describing the formation of grid unit selectivity is entirely based on developmental self-organization, and as such it predicts that the metric it expresses should reflect the environment to which the animal has adapted. We show that, according to self-organizing models, if raised in a non-Euclidean hyperbolic cage rats should be able to form hyperbolic grids. For a given range of grid spacing relative to the radius of negative curvature of the hyperbolic surface, such grids are predicted to appear as multi-peaked firing maps, in which each peak has seven neighbours instead of the Euclidean six, a prediction that can be tested in experiments. We thus demonstrate that a useful universal neuronal metric, in the sense of a multi-scale ruler and compass that remain unaltered when changing environments, can be extended to other than the standard Euclidean plane.

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