Participants navigated the virtual environments using a joystick (behavioral experiment, Trust GXT 555 Predator; fMRI experiment, MR-compatible joystick from Nata Technologies, Coquitlam, Canada), allowing them to move forward, turn left, or turn right. Moving backward was not possible so that movement direction was equivalent with heading direction. In each subtask, participants’ speed was attenuated when their distance from the center of the arena was larger than 5657 vm and linearly decreased to zero at 6788 vm, ensuring a constant movement radius in subtasks with and without a visible boundary (fig. S1). In this “speed reduction zone,” participants could navigate at full speed when heading toward the center of the arena. The position of the participant was logged every 200 ms, which allowed us to extract movement periods, movement speed, and movement direction.

https://advances.sciencemag.org/content/6/35/eaba1394