Just thinking about a location activates mental maps in the brain – study

Mental maps may be created and activated when you just think about the route, researchers say.

Nina Massey
Wednesday 12 June 2024 16:56 BST
Just thinking about a location activates mental maps in the brain – study (Matthew Fearn/PA)
Just thinking about a location activates mental maps in the brain – study (Matthew Fearn/PA) (PA Archive)

Support truly
independent journalism

Our mission is to deliver unbiased, fact-based reporting that holds power to account and exposes the truth.

Whether $5 or $50, every contribution counts.

Support us to deliver journalism without an agenda.

Louise Thomas

Louise Thomas

Editor

Simply thinking about where you are going may be able to activate mental maps in the brain, new research suggests.

As people travel their usual route to work or the shops, they engage maps in the brain that store information about paths taken and locations previously visited, so they can navigate whenever going there.

New research from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), USA, has found that such mental maps also are created and activated when you just think about the route, without any movement.

These cognitive maps are being recruited to perform mental navigation, without any sensory input or motor output

Professor Mehrdad Jazayeri

In a study in monkeys, the researchers found that a certain part of the brain holds a cognitive map of what animals experience while they use a joystick to browse through a sequence of images.

These maps are then activated when thinking about these sequences, even when the images are not visible.

Senior author, Mehrdad Jazayeri, an associate professor of brain and cognitive sciences and a member of MIT’s McGovern Institute for Brain Research, said: “These cognitive maps are being recruited to perform mental navigation, without any sensory input or motor output.”

In the study, researchers trained animals to use a joystick to trace a path through a sequence of images (landmarks) spaced at regular intervals.

During the training, the animals were shown only a subset of pairs of images – but not all the pairs.

Once the monkeys had learned to navigate through the training pairs, the researchers tested if they could handle the new pairs they had never seen before.

They found that they could mentally navigate through the new pairs.

Professor Jazayeri said: “Animals were able to mentally navigate between the new pairs of images from the very first time they were tested.

“This finding provided strong behavioural evidence for the presence of a cognitive map.”

The findings are published in the Nature journal.

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in