Self-motion as a structural prior for coherent and robust formation of cognitive maps
Yingchao Yu, Pengfei Sun, Yaochu Jin, Kuangrong Hao, Hao Zhang, Yifeng Zhang, Wenxuan Pan, Wei Chen, Danyal Akarca, Yuchen Xiao

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that self-motion functions as a structural prior, actively organizing and stabilizing cognitive map formation in both biological and artificial systems, especially under sensory ambiguity.
Contribution
It introduces a novel path-integration-based motion prior within a predictive-coding framework, enhancing map stability and accuracy in complex environments.
Findings
Improves local topological fidelity of cognitive maps.
Enhances global positional accuracy and next-step prediction.
Generalizes zero-shot to unseen environments, outperforming simpler constraints.
Abstract
Most computational accounts of cognitive maps assume that stability is achieved primarily through sensory anchoring, with self-motion contributing to incremental positional updates only. However, biological spatial representations often remain coherent even when sensory cues degrade or conflict, suggesting that self-motion may play a deeper organizational role. Here, we show that self-motion can act as a structural prior that actively organizes the geometry of learned cognitive maps. We embed a path-integration-based motion prior in a predictive-coding framework, implemented using a capacity-efficient, brain-inspired recurrent mechanism combining spiking dynamics, analog modulation and adaptive thresholds. Across highly aliased, dynamically changing and naturalistic environments, this structural prior consistently stabilizes map formation, improving local topological fidelity, global…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEmbodied and Extended Cognition · Action Observation and Synchronization · Memory and Neural Mechanisms
