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The Journal of Neuroscience, April 15, 1998, 18(8):3050-3058
Rats with Fimbria-Fornix Lesions Are Impaired in Path
Integration: A Role for the Hippocampus in "Sense of Direction"
Ian Q.
Whishaw and
Hans
Maaswinkel
Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of
Lethbridge, Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada T1K 3M4
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ABSTRACT |
Animals can locate their present position in relation to a starting
point and return to that starting point using cues generated by
self-movement, a navigation strategy called dead-reckoning. Because
contemporary research on spatial navigation suggests that some aspects
of spatial navigation depend on the integrity of the hippocampal
formation, whereas others do not, the present study examined whether
dead-reckoning is hippocampally dependent. The task capitalized on the
proclivity of foraging rats to carry large food pellets to a shelter
for eating. Control rats and rats with fimbria-fornix (FF) lesions
left a hidden burrow to search for one piece of food located somewhere
on a circular table. The accuracy with which they returned to the
burrow with the food was measured. In three experiments, rats received
probe trials in which they (1) started from novel locations, (2) wore
blindfolds to obscure visual cues, and (3) foraged under a condition in
which surface cues, e.g., odors left by their outward searches, were displaced. Both sighted control and FF rats preferentially used visual
cues for guidance when foraging from a familiar location. Control rats
were accurate and FF rats were impaired in returning to novel starting
locations (1) when sighted, (2) when blindfolded, and (3) when
blindfolded in tests in which surface cues were displaced. These
results, as well as detailed observations on the behavior of the
animals, are consistent with the hypothesis that rats can use
dead-reckoning to solve spatial problems, and this ability depends on
the integrity of the hippocampal formation.
Key words:
fimbria-fornix; hippocampus; hippocampal lesions; path
integration; spatial learning; spatial navigation
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INTRODUCTION |
Charles Darwin's (1873) suggestion
that animals might use "dead-reckoning" to navigate has been
confirmed by experiments with humans and other animals (Barlow, 1964 ;
Etienne, 1987 ; Gallistel, 1990 ). In dead-reckoning, an animal computes
its position relative to a starting location by integrating cues
generated by its movements between a starting position and present
location. If self-movement cues are integrated twice, an animal can
compute the straight-line path from its current position back to the
starting point, which is useful in allowing it to return home. An
animal can record self-motion by cues from the vestibular system,
muscle and joint receptors, and efference copies of commands that
generate movement. It may also compute its speed by monitoring flows in
visual, auditory, and olfactory stimuli caused by the movements. The
internal and external cues that provide information about self-movement
are referred to as idiothetic cues (Mittelstaedt and Mittelstaedt, 1973 ). The computations used to derive a location and a return path are
referred to as path integration. The ability to monitor one's location
and to return home is colloquially called "sense of direction."
An animal can also navigate using stable external stimuli, a behavior
called piloting (O'Keefe and Nadel, 1978 ; Gallistel, 1990 ). Such
stimuli, collectively called allothetic cues, can also be used to
remember a starting point, know present location, and return home.
Because an animal can navigate either by integrating idiothetic cues or
by learning allothetic cue relationships, it is ordinarily difficult to
determine which strategy is used in any situation. If either idiothetic
or allothetic cues are manipulated experimentally, e.g., by making them
uninformative, it is possible to determine which strategy is being
used. For example, a subject deprived of allothetic cues by loss of
vision is likely to use idiothetic cues and path integration (Landeau
et al., 1984 ; Etienne et al., 1996 ).
Presently, it is not known what brain structures allow an animal to
navigate by dead-reckoning, but behavioral (Whishaw, 1988 ; Whishaw et
al., 1997 ), modeling (Worden, 1992 ; Samsonovich and McNaughton, 1997 ),
and electrophysiological studies (O'Mara et al., 1994 ; Sharp et al.,
1995 ; Taube and Burton, 1995 ; Blare and Sharp, 1996i ; McNaughton et al.,
1996 ; Wiener, 1996 ; Golob and Taube, 1997 ) suggest that the hippocampal
formation [entorhinal cortex, dentate gyrus, hippocampus proper or
Ammon's horn, and subicular complex and fimbria-fornix (FF)] is
involved. We examine this idea by contrasting the foraging performance
of rats with sham lesions to rats with FF lesions, which disrupt
information flow in the hippocampal formation (Bland, 1986 ), impair
memory (Gaffan and Gaffan, 1991 ), and produce spatial deficits
(Whishaw, 1993 ; Whishaw and Jarrard, 1995 ). The rats leave a hidden
home base to find a large food pellet on an open field (Whishaw and Tomie, 1996 ). The accuracy with which they return to the home base is
the dependent variable. Allothetic cues are restricted by starting the
animals from novel locations, blindfolding them, and rotating the
apparatus to displace olfactory cues left on the surface of the
apparatus.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Animals
Adult female Long-Evans rats (University of Lethbridge
vivarium), weighing 250-300 gm, were housed in groups in wire mesh cages in a laboratory with room temperature maintained at 20-21°C and lighted on a 12 hr light/dark cycle (8 A.M.-8 P.M.)
Surgery
For surgery, the rats were anesthetized with sodium
pentobarbital (40 mg/kg, i.p.) and atropine methyl nitrate (5 mg/kg). To make FF lesions, 1.5 mA cathodal current was passed for 40 sec
through 00 stainless steel insect pins, insulated with Epoxylite except
at the surface of their tips. Lesions were made at two sites in each
hemisphere using coordinates in reference to bregma and the surface of
the dura: 1.3 mm posterior, 1.5 mm lateral, and 3.6 mm ventral; and 1.5 mm posterior, 0.5 mm lateral, and 3.3 mm ventral (Whishaw and Jarrard,
1996 ). The control rats received anesthesia only.
Feeding
Feeding was restricted to maintain the rats at 90% of their
expected body weights. Large (750 mg) rodent pellets (Bio-Serv Inc.,
Frenchtown, NJ), were used for reward during behavioral testing. Rats
reliably carry these pellets to a refuge for eating (Whishaw et al.,
1995a ). After testing each day, the rats were supplementally fed with
LabDiet laboratory rodent pellets in their home cage.
Apparatus
The open field consisted of a 204-cm-diameter circular wooden
table, similar to a Barnes spatial testing apparatus (Barnes, 1979 )
that was painted white and was elevated 64 cm above the floor (Fig.
1). Eight 11.5-cm-diameter holes were cut
in the table, spaced equidistant around its perimeter, and centered
13.5 cm from the edge of the table. The apparatus was mounted on a
central bearing that allowed it to be rotated between or during trials. A fixed central platform 45.5 cm in diameter, mounted 1 cm above its
surface, could be located in the center of the table. This allowed the
main table to be rotated while a rat was relatively stationary on the
central table. A food pellet was hidden in one of the 23 translucent
white food cups (4.5-cm-diameter and 1-cm-high plastic weigh boats)
attached to the table. The apparatus was located in a test room in
which many cues, including windows covered by blinds, counters, a
refrigerator, cupboards, and a desk with computers, were present. A
camera was located above the center of the table so that the behavior
of the animals could be video-recorded (Whishaw and Tomie, 1997 ).

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Figure 1.
The apparatus consists of a large circular table.
It is mounted to the table legs by a central bearing so that it can be
turned. A cage is placed beneath one of the holes into which a rat can
escape. Nothing is located beneath the other holes so that a rat cannot
escape the surface through them. Small plastic food cups, into which
food pellets can be placed, are located on the table. An elevated
circular platform can be fixed in the center of the table, allowing the
table to be rotated while the central zone is fixed.
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Masks and blindfolds
Masks (Fig. 2A)
and blindfolds (Fig. 2B), used to control the rat's
use of visual cues, were constructed of felt and attached by a velcro
collar fixed around a rat's neck. They were fastened across a rat's
face by an elastic chin strap that was attached to the neck collar. The
elastic strap was flexible so that a rat could grasp food pellets with
its mouth and chew and swallow them. A mask allowed the rats to see,
whereas a blindfold occluded vision. The effectiveness of the
blindfolds was tested on rats trained to swim to a visible platform
located in a swimming pool. Well-trained rats wearing a mask swam
directly to the platform from any starting point on the periphery of
the pool, whereas rats wearing the blindfold swam around the edge of
the pool or swam in a haphazard manner. The rats were adapted to
wearing masks and blindfolds by having them wear the apparel for at
least 30 min/d for 5 d before testing. Before the formal tests, a
mask or blindfold was placed on the animals for 30 min before the
test.

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Figure 2.
Masks (A) and blindfolds
(B). Both kinds of headwear are fixed to a rats
head by Velcro collars. An elastic chin strap holds the headwear
against a rat's face but still allows the rat to open its mouth
and chew.
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Pretraining
For pretraining, the rats received four trials each day for
10 d. A food pellet was located in each of the 23 food cups for the first few days, but the number of pellets was quickly reduced until
only one food cup was baited. The refuge cage was located beneath the
south hole throughout pretraining. During pretraining, the rats learned
to climb up onto the table, find a food pellet, and carry it back to
the cage. After the rat obtained a food pellet, a new dish was baited
while the rat was eating. Pretraining was complete when the rats
quickly executed the four search and retrieval trials in
succession.
Analysis
The behavior of the rats was filmed on all of the tests. From
the ongoing trials and the video recordings the following behavioral measures were made:
Retrieval. A retrieval was defined as an exit from the home
cage and a return with a food pellet.
Correct trial. A correct trial was a trial in which a rat
found a food pellet and returned directly to the starting hole without stopping at any other potential exit hole.
Error. An incorrect trial was one in which a rat found a
food pellet but stopped at one of the other potential exits before returning to the exit from which its excursion began. A rat was deemed
to have stopped at an exit if its snout was brought to within ~2 cm
of a hole (errors were usually unambiguous as the rats stopped and
inserted their heads into the holes).
First choice. The first choice was defined as the first hole
a rat visited after finding a food pellet.
Second choice. The second choice was defined as the second
hole that a rat visited, given that the first choice was incorrect, and
a second choice could include a perseverative return to the first
choice.
Exit and return routes. The route taken as a rat left the
home base and the route taken as a rat returned to the home base were
drawn on maps of the field. The exit and return routes were drawn with
different color pens.
Response times. Using a stopwatch, an observer recorded
separately the time taken to find a food pellet and the time taken to
return to the home cage with the food.
Statistical analysis
The directional selectivity of choices was assessed by circular
statistics (Batschelet, 1981 ). Group comparisons were made by
converting directional headings to deviational degrees from a direct
heading and subjecting the results to ANOVAs (Winer, 1962 ).
Histology
At the completion of the experiments, the rats were deeply
anesthetized and perfused with saline and saline-formalin, and the
brains were removed and stored in a 30% sucrose-formalin solution. The brains were cut in 40 µm sections on a cryostat, and alternate sections were stained with cresyl violet and stained for
acetylcholinesterase (AChE).
Procedure
Three experiments were performed. The first experiment examined
the ability of control and FF rats to return accurately to a starting
location in a visually rich environment. The second experiment
controlled the rat's use of visual cues by placing either a mask or
blindfold on the rat. The third experiment controlled the rat's use of
olfactory cues by rotating the table, to displace the odor of the home
cage and a rat's odor trail relative to the starting point.
Experiment 1: novel starting locations. Twelve rats were
pretrained to forage for a food pellet with the refuge burrow located at the south position. Once pretrained, six rats received sham and six
received FF lesions followed by 10 d of recovery. The rats then
received additional pretraining for ~5 d to ensure that they still
performed the task. On the following day the test began. The test took
place over the next 7 d during which the rats received one trial
each day. Each trial began from one of the unused holes, i.e., a new
starting location, and starting locations were selected semirandomly.
The test procedure was completed after each rat had started once from
each of the seven starting locations. For the tests, the starting cage
was placed under the "hole of the day" and no cages were located
under other holes.
Experiment 2: masks and blindfolds. Six control and six FF
rats were used. They received sham or FF lesions before training and
testing. The home cage was located at the south location during pretraining. The rats were pretrained by giving them four trials a day
for 15 d, by which time they all returned accurately to the south
exit hole. They then received two probe trials, interspersed with
5 d of baseline training from the south hole. (1) Mask probe: for
the masked probe, the masks were fitted to the rats for 30 min. The
rats then received a single trial in which the home cage containing the
animal was placed beneath the northeast hole. The food pellet was
located at a position that was diagonally opposite the starting
position. (2) Blindfold probe: for the blindfold probe, the blindfolds
were fitted to the rats for 30 min. The rats then received a single
trial in which the home cage containing the animal was placed beneath
the northeast hole. The food pellet was located at a position that was
diagonally opposite the starting position.
Experiment 3: table rotation. Ten control and 10 FF rats
were trained from the south position and were adapted to wearing blindfolds. The rats received four sets of four trials, with each set
of trials beginning at the same starting point. On three trials, the
food was in one of the food locations chosen in a semirandom manner,
and the table remained at a fixed position. On the fourth trial, a
probe trial, the food pellet was located in the center of the fixed
platform. When the rat reached the center, and as it was grasping the
food, the table was quickly rotated so that the starting hole was moved
90° to the left or right of its initial location. On the training
trials, the measure of the rat's performance was the hole that it
first contacted after finding the food. On the probe trials, the
measure of the rat's performance was the deviation in degrees from the
most direct route back to the starting position. The angle measures
were made at a point 83 cm from the center of the table, the point that
marked the inner circle of the refuge holes. Thus, if a rat's
deviation angle was 0°, it would have returned to the point in space
from which it had begun and would have found a new hole at that
location.
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RESULTS |
Histological results
The dorsal fimbria-fornix was completely sectioned in all of the
rats that were given lesions (Fig.
3A, top vs
bottom). The lesions were selective and did not damage the
septum, the septal portions of the hippocampus, or the hippocampal
commissure. The tract made by the electrodes and the lesion did little
damage to the supracallosal septohippocampal pathways or cortex other than the path made by the penetration. Previous work has shown that
supracallosal damage does not produce additional impairments on spatial
tasks (Sutherland and Rodriguez, 1989 ; Jeltsch et al., 1994 ). Stains
for AChE revealed extensive depletion of AChE in the hippocampus (Fig.
3A,B, bottom). From previous work it is known that the
lesion used in the present experiment reduces cholinergic markers by
~70% in the dorsal hippocampus (Cassel et al., 1991 ; Jeltsch et al.,
1994 ).

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Figure 3.
Photomicrographs of the control and lesion brain.
A, Control. The top photomicrograph shows
the intact fimbria-fornix at the level of the anterior commissure, and
the bottom figure shows the hippocampus at the level of
the thalamus. B, Corresponding photomicrographs in a rat
with a fimbria-fornix lesion. Top, Most of the tissue
in the cavity left by the removal of the fimbria-fornix is choroid
plexus. Bottom, Note the absence of cholinesterase
staining in the hippocampus. The cut in the cortex on the
top is a path made by an electrode penetration.
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General behavioral observations
Whether placed at a familiar or novel location, a rat typically
poked its head out of the hole a number of times before it exited. It
exited by pulling itself up with its forepaws and pushing with its
hindpaws. Once on the table, it typically paused briefly before setting
off in search of food. Its outward journeys typically consisted of
short darts followed by pauses. The direction taken from trial to trial
was inconsistent across both rats and days. As a rat traversed the
surface of the table, it scanned the food dishes with lateral head
scans, or it actually stopped and sniffed the dish. By observing a
rat's behavior, it was clear that the rat had to be within ~10 cm of
the dish to detect the food. Thus, as well as approaching the dishes, a
rat would occasionally stop and sniff, although some distance away from
a dish. Once it found a piece of food, a rat grasped it in its mouth
and set off quickly, often at a gallop, for the home base. If the home
base had been moved, or if the rat had difficulty locating it, it
stopped and inspected other holes. Inspections consisted of quite long
pauses during which the rat thrust its head into the hole, often
repeatedly, and sniffed. Once it arrived at the home base, the rat
inserted its head into the hole and adjusted the position of its feet
so that it could drop down into the cage beneath the hole. Individual rats required ~25-40 sec to eat the food before making another foraging trip.
Experiment 1: return accuracy
When started from novel locations, the control rats all initially
returned to the south location, which was the base used for
pretraining. When they did not find the home cage at that location,
they then correctly returned to the starting location of that day. With
each successive daily trials, they were increasingly likely to return
to the location from which they emerged, i.e., the new location, or the
location of the previous day. FF rats also initially returned to the
south, the training location, but their behavior was perseverative as
they returned again as their second choice (and many subsequent
choices). As training progressed, their performance became
haphazard.
By the end of pretraining, both control and FF rats returned to the
south location on every trial. On the test, using new starting
locations, the control rats returned to the starting hole on 40.5% of
trials versus 4.67% of trials for FF rats, giving a group difference
that was significant, (F(1,10) = 12.87;
p < 0.001). The accuracy in returning to the starting
hole improved across trials as indicated by a significant effect of
trials (F(6,60) = 6.75; p < 0.001), but improvement was limited to the control rats, as indicated
by a significant group by trial interaction (F(6,60) = 2.60; p < 05). When
control rats did make an error, their second choice was the correct
hole on 72% of trials versus 27.5% for FF rats. On those trials in
which the control rats failed to return to the departure location, they
most frequently went first to the training location. This was also
initially true for the FF rats, but as training progressed their
choices became almost random. By representing the correct choice as the
north hole, the training location as the south hole, and other choices
as a function of distance from the correct hole, choices were plotted as vectors on a diagram of the apparatus (Fig.
4). Circular statistics indicated that
the control rats' choices were concentrated on the correct location as
a first choice (p < 0.001) and a second choice
(p < 0.001). FF rats showed no overall
preference (p > 0.10).

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Figure 4.
Vector diagrams of location choices by control and
fimbria-fornix (FF) rats in seven tests in which
rats received one trial a day from a new location. First choice
(top), The control rats mainly returned to the
starting hole (top, correct) or to the hole that was
correct on the previous day (bottom, previously
correct), whereas choices by the FF rats are randomly distributed.
Second choice (bottom), After an
incorrect choice, the control rats mainly chose the starting location
as a second choice, whereas fimbria-fornix rats still make choices at
random. Although each trial began from a different location, the
correct hole is represented by the top location, and the
training hole is represented by the bottom location.
Other locations represent distances and direction from the correct
location.
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The accuracy measures of the rats' performance were paralleled by
measures of search and return latencies. The control rats took longer
to find the food than the FF rats (control, 39.5 sec; vs FF, 14.4 sec;
F(1,10) = 8.3; p < 0.01), but
they also returned more quickly to the correct hole than the FF rats
(control, 10.8 sec; vs FF, 23.9 sec; F(1,10) = 10.3; p < 0.01). The latency results, along with
inspection of the video records, indicated that the control rats spent
more time pausing and making scanning movements as well as inspecting
the apparatus than did the FF rats on the outward trips. For example,
control rats would also stop and inspect the starting location of the
previous day before searching for food, a behavior that was seldom
displayed by the FF rats. The high return latencies of the FF rats
reflect the time that elapsed as they made errors and their tendency to
stop and eat the food on the table when they were unable to find the
correct hole.
Experiment 2: masks and blindfolds
At the end of preliminary training, all of the rats in the control
group and in the FF group left the refuge hole, searched the table for
food, and after they found the food pellet, carried it directly back to
the refuge hole. They were also able to find and carry food when
wearing masks and blindfolds. Their behavior while wearing masks was
very similar to their behavior on training trials, but when wearing
blindfolds, their movements were deliberate, they made few head scans
in the air, and they walked with a hunched posture with their nose to
the surface of the table.
Mask probe
When the masks were placed on the rats and the rats were placed at
the northeast hole, all of the control rats and all of the FF rats
carried the food back to the south hole (the training hole). On not
finding the refuge cage at the south hole, all of the control rats then
went to the northeast location, the point from which they departed. All
of the rats with FF lesions perseverated in returning to the south hole
and only made it back to the northeast hole after committing numerous
repetitive errors. First and second choices by control and FF rats are
shown in (Fig. 5). There was one other
interesting difference between the control and FF rats. When the
control rats first emerged from the novel location, all six rats first
went to the south (training) location and investigated that hole,
before searching for the food pellet. Only two of the six FF rats
returned to the south location before searching for food. Measures of
latency showed that the control rats were slower in finding the food
pellet than were the FF rats (t(10) = 7.21; p < 0.001) but faster in returning to the starting
location with the food (t(10) = 12.2;
p < 0.001).

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Figure 5.
Performance of control and fimbria-fornix rats on
mask and blindfold probes. The rats were pretrained to go to the
previously correct location and given one probe trial while wearing a
mask in which they started from a new location (correct) and one probe
trial while wearing a blindfold in which they started from the new
location. Note that in the mask condition, control and fimbria-fornix
rats first chose the previously correct hole, but as a second choice
the control rats chose the new hole, whereas the fimbria-fornix rats
perseverated in returning to the previously correct hole. In the
blindfold condition, five of the six control rats returned to the new
starting location, whereas the responses of the fimbria-fornix rats
seemed random.
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Blindfold probe
On the blindfold probe trial, five of the control rats returned
correctly to the northeast starting location with the food, whereas
none of rats in the FF group did so (t(10) = 5.91; p < 0.001). As a second choice the one control
rat that missed the correct hole found it on its second choice, but
only one FF rat found the starting location as a second choice.
Interestingly, when blindfolded, five of the six FF rats navigated
toward the south portion of the table. They may have been guided by
auditory cues or surface olfactory cues, because no attempt was made to mask auditory cues, and the table was not washed to mask olfactory cues. Measures of latency showed that there were no differences in
finding the food (t(10) = 0.78;
p < 0.05), but the control rats were faster in
returning with the food (t(10) = 5.32;
p < 0.001).
Experiment 3: table rotation
All of the rats wore blindfolds during final training and on
testing for this experiment. Their selection of the hole was the
dependent measure on the training trials, and their selection of a
direction was the dependent measure on the probe trials on which the
starting location was rotated. All rats were able to find food pellets,
and there were no significant group differences in their latency to do
so. The control rats were more accurate and quicker in returning to
their starting point on both training and probe trials, whereas the FF
rats were inaccurate on both kinds of trials.
Training trials
The control rats were much more accurate in returning to the
starting position on the training trials than were the FF rats. The
starting hole was the first hole contacted by the control rats on
88.3% of trials versus 33.4% for the FF rats
(F(1,18) = 68.2; p < 0.001).
Probe trials
Measures of heading accuracy on the probe trials, on which the
board was rotated by 90°, while the rat was on the fixed central portion of the table retrieving the food, also showed that the control
rats were significantly more accurate in their returns to the starting
location than FF rats (control, 17.2 ± 3°; vs FF, 86 ± 11°; F(1,18) = 9.22; p < 0.001). There was no effect of probe number, nor was there an
interaction effect.
Figure 6 illustrates a typical search
route and return by a control and FF rat, each of which wore a
blindfold. Both the control and FF rat (Fig. 6, top) took a
circuitous route on the search for food before locating the food pellet
in the center of the table. At this time the periphery of the table was
rotated. The control rat then returned to the starting location, and
the FF rat did not (Fig. 6, bottom). Actual paths taken by
the control rats and the FF rats on the first probe trial are
illustrated in Figure 7.

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Figure 6.
Examples of a search and return by blindfolded
control and fimbria-fornix rats on a probe trial on which the food
pellet is located in the fixed center portion of the table. While the
rat is grasping the food, the outer portion of the maze is rotated
90° to displace surface cues. Note that (1) the path taken by both
rats on the outward trip indirectly leads them to the food pellet; (2)
the return path taken by the control rat takes it directly to the
starting location; and (3) the return path taken by the fimbria-fornix
rat is incorrect.
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Figure 7.
Return paths of blindfolded control
(A) and fimbria-fornix (B)
rats on a probe trial on which the outer portion of the table was
rotated 90°, to displace surface cues on the table, while the rat was
retrieving a food pellet from the fixed center portion of the table.
Note that the control rats returned accurately to the starting point,
whereas the fimbria-fornix rats did not. Bottom,
average heading errors (mean + SE) of control and FF rats, with 0°
representing the correct return and the angle between the correct
return and the actual return (inset) representing
performance.
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DISCUSSION |
We examined whether control and fimbria-fornix rats could return
with food to a starting location after a foraging trip, and we
manipulated the testing conditions to determine the strategy that they
used. Both control and FF rats could forage from, and return to, a
familiar starting location using vision. Only control rats (1) returned
accurately to new starting locations under visually rich conditions,
(2) returned accurately to starting points although blindfolded, and
(3) returned accurately to starting points when olfactory cues were
displaced. These results suggest that the control rats can use
dead-reckoning to navigate and further suggest that the hippocampal
formation or some portions of it is important for the use of this
strategy.
Navigating to novel locations
There is accumulating evidence that in certain circumstances
animals use dead-reckoning in conventional laboratory tests (Barlow, 1964 ; Alayn, 1996 ; Etienne et al., 1996 ; Dudenchenko et al., 1997 ; Martin et al., 1997 ). The present study provides evidence that control,
not FF, rats may use dead-reckoning in a normal visually rich
environment.
In the first experiment, both control and FF rats learned to return to
a familiar starting location, but only the control rats returned to
novel starting locations that they had experienced only on that trial.
This finding suggests that the control rats could access both piloting
and dead-reckoning strategies to guide their responses, whereas FF rats
could only access a piloting strategy. That is, the initial preference
of both groups of rats was to return to the old training location,
suggesting that they ignored idiothetic cues generated on their outward
trip from new locations in favor of using the allothetic cues that
previously had guided their homeward trips to the training location. On
finding that the refuge cage was not at that location, however, only
the control rats could quickly abandon this strategy. With repeated exposure to new locations they were also able to abandon piloting completely. It is our suggestion that the control rats switched to
using idiothetic cues and dead-reckoning, whereas the FF rats were not
able to do so (Whishaw and Tomie, 1997 ). This suggestion is consistent
with findings that control rats can flexibly select among a number of
spatial strategies when solving spatial problems (Whishaw and
Mittleman, 1986 ).
It is possible, of course, that the control rats noted the location of
the new starting holes as they exited from the hole and then
subsequently made the necessary transforms to generate a new route to
the starting location. The ability to make such transforms is referred
to as instantaneous transfer, but there is some doubt concerning the
ability of rats to perform instantaneous transfer (Whishaw, 1991 ). In
the present training conditions, the use of such transforms might be
thought to be especially difficult. The rats would not have had an
expectation that they would have to return to the novel starting
location, they had not had previous experience in returning to new
starting locations, and they had not previously viewed and approached
the new location using the cues that marked its position. We emphasize,
however, that these results are only suggestive of the use of a
dead-reckoning strategy. Mapping theory does predict that an animal
familiar with an environment could make transforms necessary to reach
new locations in that environment (O'Keefe and Nadel, 1978 ; Muller et
al., 1996 ).
Navigating wearing blindfolds
In the second experiment, the rats were trained to forage from one
location and then given probe trials from a novel location. On the
probe trials, they either wore masks, through which they could see, or
blindfolds, which obscured vision. When wearing masks, both the control
and FF rats returned with food accurately to the training location, not
the probe location. This result shows that using vision, both groups
used a piloting strategy to reach the training location. Then, only the
control rats returned to the novel starting location on discovering
their error. These results replicate the findings of the first
experiment.
When wearing blindfolds, the control rats returned directly to the
probe location, whereas the FF rats did not. Thus, the rats did not
transfer any spatial information from the training trials to the probe
trials. These results suggest that without vision, the control, but not
FF, rats use dead-reckoning to make their accurate return trips. Our
conclusion that the blindfolded control rats use dead-reckoning is
supported by the results of a number of studies that suggest that when
vision is restricted, dead-reckoning becomes a preferred navigational
strategy (Barlow, 1964 ; Landeau et al., 1984 ; Etienne et al.,
1996 ).
Although these results are suggestive that the control rats accessed
idiothetic cues, we made no attempt to mask auditory or olfactory cues.
Were the rats able to navigate using auditory cues, it would be
expected that they should return to the training location and not to
the probe location. This is because the mask test showed that when the
rats used allothetic visual cues, they go to the training location. On
this logic, the possibility that the rats used auditory cues can be
minimized. There are also difficulties with any unambiguous suggestion
that they used olfactory cues. Because we did not clean the test table
between training and probe trials, were they to use enduring surface
olfactory cues, it might be expected that these cues would lead the
rats to the training location. Because the control animals returned to
the probe location, the only available olfactory cues would be those
that they left on their outward trip. Because self-tracking is not
beyond the ability of animals, the purpose of experiment 3 was to rule
out the possibility that the rats were following their own odor trails home.
Navigating with displaced olfactory cues
In the third experiment, animals were tested only with blindfolds,
and they were tested on a table with a fixed central portion and a
movable outside portion. On probe trials, the food pellet was located
on the central platform, and as the rat retrieved it, the periphery of
the table was rotated 90°. Thus, the rats were not able to use visual
cues, and olfactory cues were displaced. Because the control rats were
accurate in returning to the starting location, and because the FF rats
were inaccurate, this appears to unambiguously demonstrate
that control rats are able to use a dead-reckoning, whereas the rats
with FF lesions are unable to do so.
Implications for hippocampal function
Contemporary research suggests that the hippocampus plays some
central role in spatial navigation, but here are divergent views
concerning its role. Cognitive mapping theorists posit that the
hippocampus develops a spatial map that is assembled through associationistic process in which the relations between allothetic cues
are learned as an animal interacts with its environment (O'Keefe and
Nadel, 1978 ; Muller et al., 1996 ). The present results show that the FF
rats had some mapping ability, because they could return to a familiar
starting location, a result that suggests there is an extrahippocampal
map (Whishaw et al., 1997 ). Path integration theorists posit that the
hippocampus contains an innate spatial reference frame within which it
can generate vectors between points (Whishaw et al., 1995a , 1997 ;
McNaughton et al., 1996 ; Samsonovich and McNaughton, 1997 ). Our finding
that in the absence of visual cues control rats could continue to
navigate, whereas FF rats could not, supports this position. Although
the present results support a role for the hippocampal formation in
path integration, they are not definitive in determining whether this
is an exclusive function. Hippocampal animals are also impaired in
learning new spatial problems in which the demands of working memory
are high (Angeli et al., 1993 ; Whishaw, 1995; Whishaw and Jarrard,
1995 , 1996 ; Whishaw et al., 1995b ). Although it is potentially possible that path integration is an important component of working spatial memory, any relation between these functions is still to be worked out.
In conclusion, the hippocampal formation is complex of nuclei and
pathways (Amaral and Witter, 1995 ), and there is behavioral evidence
for heterogeneity in its function (Grey and McNaughton, 1983 ; Jarrard,
1993 ; Whishaw and Jarrard, 1995 ). Because FF lesions disconnect a
number of hippocampal structures, it is not possible to be definitive
concerning the structures that are involved in path integration. It is
interesting that cells that code head direction are found in the
subicular complex (Taube et al., 1990 , 1995 ), parietal and posterior
cingulate cortex (Chen et al., 1994 ), thalamus (Mizumori and Williams,
1993 ; Taube 1995 ), and striatum (Wiener, 1996 ), suggesting a role for
these structures in a sense of direction. Place cells are more likely
to be found within the hippocampus proper (O'Keefe, 1976 ; Jung and
McNaughton, 1993 ; Muller et al., 1996 ), suggesting a role for this
structure in "spatial awareness." Perhaps these systems interact to
produce seamless spatial behavior (Sharp, 1997 ). Future studies will
have to separately assess the roles of different hippocampal structures on dissociative tasks such as the ones used in the present study.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Nov. 21, 1997; revised Jan. 26, 1998; accepted Jan. 28, 1998.
This work was supported by the Medical Research Council of Canada.
Correspondence should be addressed to Ian Q. Whishaw, Department of
Psychology, University of Lethbridge, Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada T1K
3M4.
 |
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