Does our brain have a specific internal compass?

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Photo by Jamie Street on Unsplash
Photo by Jamie Street on Unsplash

International researchers have found a region of the brain they believe could be our internal compass - the part of our brain that controls our sense of direction. Previous research has identified a possible internal compass in mice, so the researchers monitored the brain activity of 15 human as they navigated a virtual reality city to see if they could identify something similar in people. The researchers say clusters in a section of the brain linked to navigation and memory appeared to be consistently attuned to the direction participants were facing, regardless of where in the virtual city they were or what they were doing. The researchers say losing your sense of direction can be a part of neurodegenerative diseases, so finding where in the brain our internal compass is could help them better understand those diseases.

Media release

From: Society for Neuroscience

Identifying a compass in the human brain

Researchers used neuroimaging and virtual reality to identify two brain regions that help people maintain their sense of direction while moving around.

Zhengang Lu and Russell Epstein, from the University of Pennsylvania, led a study to explore how people maintain their sense of direction while navigating naturalistic, virtual reality cities.

The researchers collected neuroimaging data while 15 participants performed a taxi driving task in a virtual reality city. Two brain regions represented forward-facing direction as people moved around. This neural signal was consistent across variations of the city with different visual features. The signal was also consistent across different phases of the task (i.e., picking up a passenger versus driving a passenger to their drop-off location) and various locations in the city. Additional analyses suggested that these brain regions represent a broad range of facing directions by keeping track of direction relative to the north–south axis of the environment.

According to the researchers, these findings suggest that these brain regions may serve as a neural compass. Says Epstein, “Losing your sense of direction is something that can happen in neurodegenerative diseases, so continuing to explore the function of these two brain regions may help with early detection or monitoring progression of these diseases. We’re also interested in understanding how people navigate using both visual and internal cues—this would relate to the challenges faced by people with impaired vision.”

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conference:
JNeurosci
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: University of Pennsylvania, USA
Funder: Supported by NIH grants R01EY022350 and R21EY027047 to RAE.
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