Abstract
Experiments on rodents have demonstrated that transecting the white matter fibre pathway linking the hippocampus with an array of cortical and subcortical structures - the fornix - impairs flexible navigational learning in the Morris Water Maze (MWM), as well as similar spatial learning tasks. While diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI) studies in humans have linked inter-individual differences in fornix microstructure to episodic memory abilities, its role in human spatial learning is currently unknown. We used high-angular resolution diffusion MRI combined with constrained spherical deconvolution-based tractography, to ask whether inter-individual differences in fornix microstructure in healthy young adults would be associated with spatial learning in a virtual reality navigation task. To efficiently capture individual learning across trials, we adopted a novel curve fitting approach to estimate a single index of learning rate. We found a statistically significant correlation between learning rate and the microstructure (mean diffusivity) of the fornix, but not that of a comparison tract linking occipital and anterior temporal cortices (the inferior longitudinal fasciculus, ILF). Further, this correlation remained significant when controlling for both hippocampal volume and participant gender. These findings extend previous animal studies by demonstrating the functional relevance of the fornix for human spatial learning in a virtual reality environment, and highlight the importance of a distributed neuroanatomical network, underpinned by key white matter pathways, such as the fornix, in complex spatial behaviour.
Highlights
The ability to navigate, and learn the location of rewards and goals in the environment, is a fundamental and highly adaptive cognitive function across motile species (Ekstrom, Spiers, Bohbot, & Shayna Rosenbaum, 2018; Landau & Lakusta, 2009; Murray, Wise, & Graham, 2016; Poulter, Hartley, & Lever, 2018)
Single-shell cortex 1 2 4 ( 2 0 2 0 ) 9 7 e1 1 0 high-angular resolution diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI) (HARDI) (Tuch et al, 2002) data were collected with a single-shot spin-echo echo-planar imaging pulse sequence with the following parameters: TE 1⁄4 87 msec; voxel dimensions 1⁄4 2.4 Â 2.4 Â 2.4 mm3; field of view 1⁄4 23 Â 23 cm2; 96 Â 96 acquisition matrix; 60 contiguous slices acquired along an obliqueeaxial plane with 2.4 mm thickness
There was no significant association between individual learning rate and MD in a comparison tract - the inferior longitudinal fasciculus (ILF; r 1⁄4 À.07; p 1⁄4 .63, 95% Bayesian credibility intervals (BCI) [.37, .01], Bþ0 1⁄4 .19)
Summary
The ability to navigate, and learn the location of rewards and goals in the environment, is a fundamental and highly adaptive cognitive function across motile species (Ekstrom, Spiers, Bohbot, & Shayna Rosenbaum, 2018; Landau & Lakusta, 2009; Murray, Wise, & Graham, 2016; Poulter, Hartley, & Lever, 2018). Fornix transection impairs place learning in other maze-based tasks (Dumont, Amin, Wright, Dillingham, & Aggleton, 2015; Hudon, Dore, & Goulet, 2003; Olton, Walker, & Gage, 1978; O’Keefe, Nadel, Keightley, & Kill, 1975; Packard, Hirsh, & White, 1989) While these rodent studies highlight a key role for the fornix in spatial learning across a range of visuospatial and navigation tasks, the role of this white matter pathway in human wayfinding is currently unknown. We predicted that ILF microstructure would be unrelated to spatial learning rate
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have
More From: Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior
Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.