Abstract

Several cortical and diencephalic limbic brain regions incorporate neurons that fire in correlation with the speed of whole-body motion, also known as linear velocity. Besides the field mapping and head-directional information, the linear velocity is among the major signals that guide animal’s spatial navigation. Large neuronal populations in the same limbic regions oscillate with theta rhythm during spatial navigation or attention episodes; and the frequency of theta also correlates with linear velocity. A functional similarity between these brain areas is that their inactivation impairs the ability to form new spatial memories; whereas an anatomical similarity is that they all receive projections from medial septum-diagonal band of Broca complex. We review recent findings supporting the model that septal theta rhythm integrates different sensorimotor signals necessary for spatial navigation. The medial septal is described here as a circuitry that mediates experience-dependent balance of sustained attention and path integration during navigation. We discuss the hypothesis that theta rhythm serves as a key mechanism for the aligning of intrinsic spatial representation to: (1) rapid change of position in the spatial environment; (2) continuous alteration of sensory signals throughout navigation; and (3) adapting levels of attentional behavior. The synchronization of these spatial, somatosensory and neuromodulatory signals is proposed here to be anatomically and physiologically mediated by the medial septum.

Highlights

  • Anatomical dissociation of the brain structures mediating: (1) locomotion; (2) rhythmic theta oscillations; and (3) attentional control is not straightforward and distinctive

  • The contemporary understanding of medial septum is that this region does not generate rhythmic oscillations and integrates variety of processed sensorimotor signals

  • We know that sustained attention and spatial navigation crucially depend on the activity of functionally intact medial septum

Read more

Summary

Marian Tsanov*

Large neuronal populations in the same limbic regions oscillate with theta rhythm during spatial navigation or attention episodes; and the frequency of theta correlates with linear velocity. We discuss the hypothesis that theta rhythm serves as a key mechanism for the aligning of intrinsic spatial representation to: (1) rapid change of position in the spatial environment; (2) continuous alteration of sensory signals throughout navigation; and (3) adapting levels of attentional behavior. The synchronization of these spatial, somatosensory and neuromodulatory signals is proposed here to be anatomically and physiologically mediated by the medial septum

INTRODUCTION
LOCOMOTOR CIRCUITS IN THE BRAIN
REINFORCEMENT BEHAVIOR
ATTENTIONAL CONTROL
THETA OSCILLATIONS AND LINEAR SPEED
SENSORIMOTOR SIGNAL PROCESSING
THETA RHYTHM AND PATH INTEGRATION
Findings
CONCLUSION
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call