Grid cells
represent where an animal is located within its environment, which the
researchers liken to having a satnav in the brain. They fire in patterns that
show up as geometrically regular, triangular grids when plotted on a map of a
navigated surface. They were discovered by a Norwegian lab in 2005 whose research
suggested that rats create virtual grids to help them orient themselves in
their surroundings, and remember new locations in unfamiliar territory.
Study
co-author Dr Caswell Barry said: “It is as if grid cells provide a cognitive map
of space. In fact, these cells are very much like the longitude and latitude
lines we’re all familiar with on normal maps, but instead of using square grid
lines it seems the brain uses triangles.”