In the current study, I investigated both human behavior and brain dynamics during spatial navigation to gain a better understanding of human navigational strategies and brain signals that underlie spatial cognition. To this end, a custom-built virtual reality task and a 64-channel scalp electroencephalogram (EEG) were utilized to study participants. At the first step, we presented a novel, straightforward, yet powerful tool to evaluate individual differences during navigation, comprising of a virtual radial-arm maze inspired to the animal experiments. The virtual maze is designed and furnished, similar to an art gallery, to provide a more realistic and exciting environment for subjects’ exploration. We investigated whether a different set of instructions (explicit or implicit) affects subjects’ navigational performance, and we assessed the effect of the set of instructions on exploration strategies during both place learning and recall. We tested 42 subjects and evaluated their way-finding ability. Individual differences were assessed through the analysis of the navigational paths, which permitted the isolation and definition of a few strategies adopted by both subjects who adopted a more explicit strategy, based on explicit instructions, and an implicit strategy, based on implicit instructions. The second step aimed to explore brain dynamics and neurophysiological activity during spatial navigation. More specifically, we aimed to figure out how navigational related brain regions are connected and how their interactions and electrical activity vary according to different navigational tasks and environment. This experiment was divided into two steps: learning phase and test phase. The same virtual maze (art gallery) as the behavioral part of the study was used so that subjects to perform landmark-based navigation. The main task of the experiment was finding and memorizing the position of some goals within the environment during the learning phase and retrieving the spatial information of the goals during the test phase. We recorded EEG signals of 20 subjects during the experiment, and both scalp-level and source-level analysis approaches were employed to figure out how the brain represents the spatial location of landmarks and targets and, more precisely, how different brain regions contribute to spatial orientation and landmark-based learning during navigation.

Brain dynamic during landmark-based learning spatial navigation / Taherigorji, Hamed. - (2021 Feb 22).

Brain dynamic during landmark-based learning spatial navigation

TAHERIGORJI, HAMED
22/02/2021

Abstract

In the current study, I investigated both human behavior and brain dynamics during spatial navigation to gain a better understanding of human navigational strategies and brain signals that underlie spatial cognition. To this end, a custom-built virtual reality task and a 64-channel scalp electroencephalogram (EEG) were utilized to study participants. At the first step, we presented a novel, straightforward, yet powerful tool to evaluate individual differences during navigation, comprising of a virtual radial-arm maze inspired to the animal experiments. The virtual maze is designed and furnished, similar to an art gallery, to provide a more realistic and exciting environment for subjects’ exploration. We investigated whether a different set of instructions (explicit or implicit) affects subjects’ navigational performance, and we assessed the effect of the set of instructions on exploration strategies during both place learning and recall. We tested 42 subjects and evaluated their way-finding ability. Individual differences were assessed through the analysis of the navigational paths, which permitted the isolation and definition of a few strategies adopted by both subjects who adopted a more explicit strategy, based on explicit instructions, and an implicit strategy, based on implicit instructions. The second step aimed to explore brain dynamics and neurophysiological activity during spatial navigation. More specifically, we aimed to figure out how navigational related brain regions are connected and how their interactions and electrical activity vary according to different navigational tasks and environment. This experiment was divided into two steps: learning phase and test phase. The same virtual maze (art gallery) as the behavioral part of the study was used so that subjects to perform landmark-based navigation. The main task of the experiment was finding and memorizing the position of some goals within the environment during the learning phase and retrieving the spatial information of the goals during the test phase. We recorded EEG signals of 20 subjects during the experiment, and both scalp-level and source-level analysis approaches were employed to figure out how the brain represents the spatial location of landmarks and targets and, more precisely, how different brain regions contribute to spatial orientation and landmark-based learning during navigation.
22-feb-2021
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1526302
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