Quantified Symmetry for Entorhinal Spatial Maps - Robotics Institute Carnegie Mellon University

Quantified Symmetry for Entorhinal Spatial Maps

Erick Chastain and Yanxi Liu
Conference Paper, Proceedings of 15th Annual Computational Neuroscience Meeting (CNS '06), July, 2006

Abstract

General navigation requires a spatial map that is not anchored to one environment. The firing fields of the "grid cells" found in the rat dorsolateral medial entorhinal cortex (dMEC) could be such a map. Our work provides an explanation for how the context-independent prop erties of "grid cell" firing arise. We use computational means to analyze and validate the geometric and algebraic invariant prop erties of the firing fields, leading to a context-indep endent spatial map. Our metho d computes the specific symmetry group implicitly asso ciated with the spatial map, and quantifies the regularity of the firing fields to achieve a symmetry-based clustering into two different typ es of "grid cells." This quantified regularity makes spatial mapping more computationally efficient and suggests a way to use the dMEC firing patterns to decode the rat's p osition in the ro om. Finally, the highly invariant lattice structure of a "grid cell" firing field encodes the rat's p osition with sufficient redundancy to remain the same under changes in the shape of the room. Thus we show formally how the context-indep endent prop erties of "grid cells" can arise from their invariance under transformation.

BibTeX

@conference{Chastain-2006-9527,
author = {Erick Chastain and Yanxi Liu},
title = {Quantified Symmetry for Entorhinal Spatial Maps},
booktitle = {Proceedings of 15th Annual Computational Neuroscience Meeting (CNS '06)},
year = {2006},
month = {July},
}