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No Need for a Cognitive Map: Decentralized Memory for Insect Navigation

Overview of attention for article published in PLoS Computational Biology, March 2011
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Title
No Need for a Cognitive Map: Decentralized Memory for Insect Navigation
Published in
PLoS Computational Biology, March 2011
DOI 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002009
Pubmed ID
Authors

Holk Cruse, Rüdiger Wehner

Abstract

In many animals the ability to navigate over long distances is an important prerequisite for foraging. For example, it is widely accepted that desert ants and honey bees, but also mammals, use path integration for finding the way back to their home site. It is however a matter of a long standing debate whether animals in addition are able to acquire and use so called cognitive maps. Such a 'map', a global spatial representation of the foraging area, is generally assumed to allow the animal to find shortcuts between two sites although the direct connection has never been travelled before. Using the artificial neural network approach, here we develop an artificial memory system which is based on path integration and various landmark guidance mechanisms (a bank of individual and independent landmark-defined memory elements). Activation of the individual memory elements depends on a separate motivation network and an, in part, asymmetrical lateral inhibition network. The information concerning the absolute position of the agent is present, but resides in a separate memory that can only be used by the path integration subsystem to control the behaviour, but cannot be used for computational purposes with other memory elements of the system. Thus, in this simulation there is no neural basis of a cognitive map. Nevertheless, an agent controlled by this network is able to accomplish various navigational tasks known from ants and bees and often discussed as being dependent on a cognitive map. For example, map-like behaviour as observed in honey bees arises as an emergent property from a decentralized system. This behaviour thus can be explained without referring to the assumption that a cognitive map, a coherent representation of foraging space, must exist. We hypothesize that the proposed network essentially resides in the mushroom bodies of the insect brain.

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Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
United States 14 5%
Germany 9 3%
United Kingdom 6 2%
Switzerland 3 1%
Netherlands 2 <1%
Brazil 2 <1%
Portugal 2 <1%
Australia 1 <1%
Finland 1 <1%
Other 4 2%
Unknown 215 83%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Student > Ph. D. Student 74 29%
Researcher 44 17%
Student > Master 33 13%
Student > Bachelor 23 9%
Professor 11 4%
Other 38 15%
Unknown 36 14%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 112 43%
Psychology 24 9%
Neuroscience 23 9%
Computer Science 17 7%
Engineering 9 3%
Other 32 12%
Unknown 42 16%