Cookies on this website

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you click 'Continue' we'll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies and you won't see this message again. Click 'Find out more' for information on how to change your cookie settings.

Behavioural and Cognitive Neuroscience (BEACON) Seminar Series

Tuesday, 9 June 2026, 1pm to 2pm

Abstract

Cognitive maps offer a powerful way to compress experience into low-dimensional structure that supports flexible learning, inference, and generalization across both spatial and conceptual domains. But a map is only useful if it can guide action. In this talk, I will present a unifying account of how hippocampal–entorhinal cognitive maps become action-relevant—not only for spatial navigation, but also for nonspatial declarative knowledge. I will first review evidence that conceptual navigation recruits complementary allocentric and egocentric reference frames. I will then propose that egocentric coding in conceptual spaces can be understood as an attentional “point of view,” implemented as a directional attentional gradient, and show how mental operations can be modeled as movements of attention over relational structure. Finally, I will outline how reference-frame transformations and state-updating mechanisms—well characterized in spatial navigation—can be generalized to conceptual domains, yielding actionable representations that support both overt behavior and internal mental actions.

Speaker(s): Prof Roberto Bottini (University of Trento (Italy))

Series: Behavioural and Cognitive Neuroscience (BEACON) Seminar Series

Venue: The Life and Mind Building - Seminar room 7 & 8 - Seminar room 7 & 8 The Life and Mind Building South Parks Road Oxford United Kingdom

Department: Experimental Psychology (Department)

Organiser: Dr Ali Mahmoodi, Dr Fei-Yang Huang

Host: Dr Sebastijan Veselic

More info:

The Life and Mind Building

Seminar Room 7/8 (Lower Ground Floor), South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3EL

University Map