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Much has been learned about the cognitive and neural mechanisms by which humans and other animals navigate to reach their goals. However, most studies have involved a single, well-learned environment. By contrast, real-world wayfinding often occurs in unfamiliar settings, requiring people to combine memories of landmark locations with on-the-fly information about transitions between adjacent states. Here, we studied the strategies that support human navigation in wholly novel environments. We found that during goal-directed navigation, people use a mix of strategies, adaptively deploying both associations between proximal states (state transitions) and directions between distal landmarks (vectors) at stereotyped points on a journey. Deep neural networks meta-trained with reinforcement learning to find the shortest path to goal exhibited near-identical strategies, and in doing so, developed units specialized for the implementation of vector- and state transition-based strategies. These units exhibited response patterns and representational geometries that resemble those previously found in mammalian navigational systems. Overall, our results suggest that effective navigation in novel environments relies on an adaptive mix of state transition- and vector-based strategies, supported by different modes of representing the environment in the brain.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3003296 | DOI Listing |
During navigation, animals continually sample their surrounding space and plan routes to distant goals. The brain mechanisms underlying these behaviors and how they coordinate to support memory-guided navigation in open environments are not understood. Using large-scale recordings in rats, we found two distinct types of place cell sequences within theta cycles that encoded trajectories sweeping beyond the animal's location: stereotypic left-right alternating sweeps and learning-dependent goal-directed sweeps.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Robot AI
August 2025
Information Technologies Institute, The Centre for Research and Technology Hellas, Thessaloniki, Greece.
Agentic AI refers to autonomous systems that can perceive their environment, make decisions, and take actions to achieve goals with minimal or no human intervention. Recent advances in Large Language Models (LLMs) have opened new pathways to imbue robots with such "agentic" behaviors by leveraging the LLMs' vast knowledge and reasoning capabilities for planning and control. This survey provides the first comprehensive exploration of LLM-based robotic systems integration into agentic behaviors that have been validated in real-world applications.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVisual scene perception enables rapid interpretation of the surrounding environment by integrating multiple visual features related to task demands and context, which is essential for goal-directed behavior. In the present work, we investigated the temporal neural dynamics underlying the interaction between the processing of bottom-up visual features and top-down contextual knowledge during scene perception. We asked whether newly acquired spatial knowledge would immediately modulate the early neural responses involved in the extraction of navigational affordances available (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
July 2025
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, Unit on motivation and Arousal, Division of Intramural Clinical and Biological Research, NIH, Bethesda, MD, USA.
Theta oscillations - rhythmic patterns of synchronous activity within discrete brain regions - are known to support memory, navigation, and behavioral coordination, and are sensitive to pharmacological manipulation. Acute ethanol (EtOH) exposure has been shown to alter theta oscillations, but its effects on transient theta bursts and cross-regional coordination during naturalistic behavior remain unclear. We recorded local field potentials (LFPs) from the medial septum (MS), hippocampal (CA1), and medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) in freely foraging mice following intraperitoneal injection of EtOH (1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehav Processes
August 2025
Department of Psychology, Lyon College, Batesville, AR, USA. Electronic address:
Although domesticated cats are often perceived as solitary creatures, they display considerable socio-ecological variability in comparison to their wildcat relatives. This diversity has led cats to develop a variety of facial signals to navigate different environments, as well as several communicative mechanisms, including rapid facial mimicry. The extent to which cats have developed complex communication mechanisms remains uncertain.
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