A Model of Grid Cell Development through Spatial Exploration and Spike Time-Dependent Plasticity

Neurons 0301 basic medicine 0303 health sciences Neuronal Plasticity Neuroscience(all) Models, Neurological Action Potentials Spatial Behavior Hippocampus 03 medical and health sciences Interneurons Exploratory Behavior Animals
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2014.06.018 Publication Date: 2014-07-16T13:55:03Z
ABSTRACT
Grid cell responses develop gradually after eye opening, but little is known about the rules that govern this process. We present a biologically plausible model for the formation of a grid cell network. An asymmetric spike time-dependent plasticity rule acts upon an initially unstructured network of spiking neurons that receive inputs encoding animal velocity and location. Neurons develop an organized recurrent architecture based on the similarity of their inputs, interacting through inhibitory interneurons. The mature network can convert velocity inputs into estimates of animal location, showing that spatially periodic responses and the capacity of path integration can arise through synaptic plasticity, acting on inputs that display neither. The model provides numerous predictions about the necessity of spatial exploration for grid cell development, network topography, the maturation of velocity tuning and neural correlations, the abrupt transition to stable patterned responses, and possible mechanisms to set grid period across grid modules.
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