Representation of conceptual affordances in eye movements and the entorhinal cortex
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Structural representations in the entorhinal cortex are a crucial feature of cognitive maps. However, a complete understanding of task structure often requires knowledge of the actions available at each state (analogous to the moves of different pieces on a chessboard). Moreover, action representations are key to several models of the hippocampal-entorhinal system. In this study, we tested whether the entorhinal cortex represents the actions that allow transitioning between states of a conceptual space. In particular, participants learned to transition between numerically-labelled states using different mathematical operations. Behaviourally, participants learned and generalised action information across states. Action information was also reflected in eye movements, indicating the active processing of the possible actions for a given state during the trials. Importantly, we found that neural pattern similarity in the right entorhinal cortex scaled with the similarity of action affordances across the states. This affordance representation was not explained by other properties of the task space such as link distance between the states or action magnitude. In sum, this study provides first evidence for the integration of action information into ocular and entorhinal representations of conceptual spaces, suggesting that these may not just store experiences, but provide information about how to explore knowledge.