Submitted by Danjeczko3 t3_yuyrw9 in askscience
I’m wondering if my ancestors couldn’t stray more than 2 miles from their camp or my parents didn’t let me wander enough as a kid. While I think I’m above average in other cognitive areas (music, math, even visual stuff like autocad drawing), i have the worst sense of direction. I get to places and have almost no recollection how i got there directionally. It’s worse for me when i’m traveling in a group. I thank god and google everyday for gps and maps. Where does one’s sense of direction come from and are there ways to improve it?
[deleted] t1_iwdtvle wrote
"Grid cells" in the hippocampus. They're one of the few systems all mammals have seemingly fully functioning at birth. In a nutshell they're a network of neurons at the very center of your brain, responsible for remembering the order in which neural activity occurs. Think of it like taking all the frames of a movie and keeping them in order. The frames aren't stored there, more like the sequence of commands for regenerating the scene a la a computer generated scene in a video game.
They also play a very strong role in coordinating neural activity in general (in concert with other regions of the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex), so that we can switch between thinking about past, present, and future. Pulses are sent out rhythmically, and on a task specific basis, to say "this idea is in the past, present, future, past, present, future, past past past, future, future," etc.
They're also very strongly implicated in our ability to think abstractly, however this doesn't mean that people who have poor direction sense have difficulties abstracting. The brain is complicated.
General primer: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grid_cell
Some details: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4364032/