화학공학소재연구정보센터
Nature, Vol.396, No.6706, 75-77, 1998
Hippocampal lesions disrupt navigation based on cognitive maps but not heading vectors
Animals can find a hidden goal in several ways. They might use a cognitive map that encodes information about the geometric relationship between the goal and two or more landmarks(1), Alternatively, they might use a heading vector that specifies the direction and distance of the goal from a single landmark(2). Rats with damage to the hippocampus have difficulty in finding a hidden goal(3). Here we determine which of the above strategies is affected by such damage. Rats were required to swim in a water maze to a submerged platform, which was always at the same distance and direction from a landmark The platform and landmark remained in the same place for the four trials of each session, but they were moved to a new position at the start of a session(4). Rats with damage to the hippocampus found the platform more efficiently than did normal rats in the first trial of a session but, in contrast to normal rats, their performance did not improve during a session. Our results indicate that hippocampally damaged rats are able to navigate by means of heading vectors but not cognitive maps.