Cognitive Strategies Dependent on the Hippocampus and Caudate Nucleus in Human Navigation: Variability and Change with Practice
Douglas Mental Health University Institute · Fondazione Santa Lucia · +2 more institutions
Abstract
The human brain activity related to strategies for navigating in space and how it changes with practice was investigated with functional magnetic resonance imaging. Subjects used two different strategies to solve a place-learning task in a computer-generated virtual environment. One-half of the subjects used spatial landmarks to navigate in the early phase of training, and these subjects showed increased activation of the right hippocampus. The other half used a nonspatial strategy and showed, with practice, sustained increased activity within the caudate nucleus during navigation. Activation common to both groups was observed in the posterior parietal and frontal cortex. These results provide the first…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 44.25
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 33
Authors
5- GIGiuseppe IariaCorresponding
Douglas Mental Health University Institute, Fondazione Santa Lucia, McGill University
- MPMichael Petrides
Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital, Douglas Mental Health University Institute, Fondazione Santa Lucia, McGill University
- ADAlain Dagher
Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital, Douglas Mental Health University Institute, Fondazione Santa Lucia, McGill University
- BPBruce Pike
Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital, Douglas Mental Health University Institute, Fondazione Santa Lucia, McGill University
- VDVéronique D. Bohbot
Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital, Douglas Mental Health University Institute, Fondazione Santa Lucia, McGill University
Topics & keywords
- Caudate nucleus
- Functional magnetic resonance imaging
- Neuroscience
- Psychology
- Hippocampus
- Task (project management)
- Spatial memory
- Cognition