NUK - logo
E-viri
Celotno besedilo
Recenzirano
  • Rethinking retrosplenial co...
    Alexander, Andrew S.; Place, Ryan; Starrett, Michael J.; Chrastil, Elizabeth R.; Nitz, Douglas A.

    Neuron (Cambridge, Mass.), 01/2023, Letnik: 111, Številka: 2
    Journal Article

    The last decade has produced exciting new ideas about retrosplenial cortex (RSC) and its role in integrating diverse inputs. Here, we review the diversity in forms of spatial and directional tuning of RSC activity, temporal organization of RSC activity, and features of RSC interconnectivity with other brain structures. We find that RSC anatomy and dynamics are more consistent with roles in multiple sensorimotor and cognitive processes than with any isolated function. However, two more generalized categories of function may best characterize roles for RSC in complex cognitive processes: (1) shifting and relating perspectives for spatial cognition and (2) prediction and error correction for current sensory states with internal representations of the environment. Both functions likely take advantage of RSC’s capacity to encode conjunctions among sensory, motor, and spatial mapping information streams. Together, these functions provide the scaffold for intelligent actions, such as navigation, perspective taking, interaction with others, and error detection. What is the retrosplenial cortex and what does it do? Alexander et al. discuss theories inspired by these questions and highlight their limitations. They propose that retrosplenial activity serves to relate spatial perspectives and to generate predictions about environmental interactions.