Can the brain map ‘non-conventional’ geometries (and abstract spaces)?

Can the brain map ‘non-conventional’ geometries (and abstract spaces)?

ZoyosJD|11 years ago|Culture

Grid cells, space-mapping neurons of the entorhinal cortex of rodents, could also work for hyperbolic surfaces. A SISSA study just published in Interface, the journal of the Royal Society, tests a model (a computer simulation) based on mathematical principles, that explains how maps emerge in the brain and shows how these maps adapt to the environment in which the individual develops.