Why Visual Cortex Active When Reading Braile

Introduction

Encephalon imaging studies draw visual cortex activity in blind people during nonvisual tasks such every bit Braille reading, hearing words, or sensory discriminations of tactile or auditory stimuli [for literature citations see Burton et al. (2002a,b) and Sadato et al. (2002)]. Only stated, loss of vision does not lead to permanent inactivation of visual cortex. These counter-intuitive findings support the notion of altered capabilities for surviving modalities through reorganization of cortical functions. At that place are two possible mechanisms for modifying activity in various parts of visual cortex of blind people. I is that the changes constitute de novo cross-modal plasticity in response to severe unimodal sensory deprivation. The potential processes responsible for novel effects involve anatomical and physiological changes that take been studied extensively using animate being models (Bavelier and Neville, 2002). Alternatively, observed access of surviving modalities to deprived cortex is an expression, albeit exaggerated, of normal physiology that usually is inhibited or hidden when vision is present. This potential mechanism relies on possible changes in the balance of activeness inside existing cortical and subcortical networks. These mechanisms are not mutually exclusive given different ages for blindness onset and, therefore, differences in developmental sensitive periods in establishing connections. Data from encephalon imaging is especially stiff in revealing the network of active cortex. Interpretation of this evidence potentially tin reveal which of these mechanisms mostly influences the behavioral adaptations observed in blind people. Notwithstanding, current descriptions of affected visual cortical regions differ, especially regarding whether changes occur early in the hierarchy of visual brain areas, particularly in primary visual cortex (V1), or arise in college tier areas, some of which normally receive input from other modalities. Some studies report V1 responses in early blind subjects (individuals who were born blind or totally lost sight before age half dozen) (Sadato et al., 1996, 1998, 2002); other studies indicate V1 activity mostly in tardily blind subjects (individuals with sight at birth, who learned to read print, and who lost sight after historic period 12) (Büchel et al., 1998a,b; Melzer et al., 2001). We observed activity throughout portions of visual cortex in all bullheaded individuals engaged in a Braille reading task, regardless of the age of blindness onset (Burton et al., 2002a). Identification of the possible factors that are responsible for these differing results contributes to consideration of possible mechanisms underlying reorganized activity in visual cortex. Before a discussion of these issues, still, the post-obit briefly summarizes the network of visual cortex responses observed in bullheaded people when they performed a demanding language chore.

Subjects in our functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies were required to generate a verb to nouns. In one experiment, blind subjects read the nouns through Braille (Braille chore) (Burton et al., 2002a); in a second study, bullheaded and sighted subjects heard the nouns (auditory task) (Burton et al., 2002b). The principal finding from both studies was that blind people had activation foci in visual cortex that corresponded to visually responsive regions noted previously in sighted subjects (Malach et al., 1995; Sereno et al., 1995; Tootell et al., 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998; DeYoe et al., 1996; Engel et al., 1997; Hadjikhani et al., 1998). Effigy 1 indicates the correspondence between the functional foci in blind people evoked during the verb-generation tasks and visual stimulation-evoked foci in sighted people. This analogy presents results on standardized apartment maps from both hemispheres (Van Essen et al., 1998, 2002). The borders of visuotopic areas stand for summaries from several studies in which various visual stimuli were presented to sighted people (Tootell et al., 1995, 1997, 1998; Hadjikhani et al., 1998; Van Essen, 2002). The average z-score maps are from bullheaded people who generated verbs to nouns read in Braille II (Fig. iA ) or to heard nouns (Fig. 1B ). These statistical maps summarize results from individual subject analyses. The latter were based on application of a full general linear model, an event-related strategy, and an affine transformation of the information from each subject to a standard atlas space (Burton et al., 2002a,b). Except for the anatomical normalization used to align boilerplate statistical maps to the coordinate infinite of the flattened model brain shown in Figure 1, comparable localization of responses was seen in individual subjects.

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Two-dimensional, flattened views of z-score statistical parameter maps for visual cortex Bold responses in early and late blind subjects. Maps in A and B were obtained, respectively, when subjects generated verbs to Braille read or heard nouns. A minimumz-score threshold for all maps was iv.5;p= 0.05. Maximumz-scores for results from early bullheaded subjects were 30 and 35, respectively, in A and B, and 22 for all results from late blind subjects. C, Visuotopic borders drawn and labeled according to previous results obtained in sighted subjects (Hadjikhani et al., 1998; Van Essen, 2002, 2003).

In early blind subjects, both tasks evoked an extensive bilateral distribution of pregnant responses throughout currently divers visuotopic areas [V1, V2, V3, V3A, ventral posterior (VP), V4v, V7, V8, lateral occipital (LO), and eye temporal area (MT)]; the left hemisphere contained greater activity (Fig. 1). Ventral visual areas (V1v, V2v, VP, and V4v) were more responsive, specially during Braille reading (Fig. iA ). The latter distinction was more axiomatic in the right hemisphere. In V1, V2, V3, VP, and V4v, which display spatially distinctive retinotopic eccentricities in sighted subjects (Tootell et al., 1998), action in bullheaded subjects was paramount in parafoveal, by and large absent in foveal, and scattered through peripheral representations. The more confined distribution of responses evoked during the Braille task best illustrates this correlation of visual cortex activity in bullheaded people and standard retinotopic maps obtained using visual stimulation and sighted subjects (Fig. iA ). Responses in blind people also occurred throughout the next tier of visual areas (V7, V8, LO, and MT). Activeness in the latter regions was bilateral for verb generation with heard nouns (auditory task) and predominated in the left hemisphere with Braille-read nouns.

Belatedly blind people also showed activity in several visual regions. In contrast to results from early blind subjects, responses were greater in the correct hemisphere for the Braille chore (Fig. aneA ) and in the right V1v for the auditory chore. However, correct hemisphere-dominant responses were elicited but during the Braille chore for higher visual areas. Hit was that responses were more confined to parafoveal parts of affected visual areas. The right hemisphere in both studies, for example, contained activity near the centers of V1d, V1v, V2d, V2v, V3, VP, V3A, and V4v. A similar pattern occurred throughout the aforementioned regions in the left hemisphere for the auditory task. Modest responses were also concentrated in parafoveal parts of dorsal and ventral V1 and V2 in the left hemisphere during the Braille job. With the exception of V8, and possibly LO, college tier visual areas showed little activeness in these subjects.

Activity occurred in tardily blind, although nigh had no previous visual deficits before incomprehension. All but one belatedly blind subject had absolutely no calorie-free sensitivity. The average age of incomprehension onset for the studied population was beyond sensitive periods fifty-fifty for slowly maturing visual cortex functions (Kovacs, 2000). In the study with heard nouns, the boilerplate age was >nineteen years (range seven–36 years) (Burton et al., 2002a), and in the written report with Brailleread nouns, information technology was >12 years (range ten–25 years) (Burton et al., 2002b). Thus, in contrast to the early on blind subjects, visual cortex had time to develop commonly because even the youngest late bullheaded subject area was older than the sensitive menses for well-nigh synapse elimination [see references cited in Bavelier and Neville (2002)]. Although these subjects showed less responsiveness, they nevertheless exhibited comparable visual cortex involvement. In contrast, the population of studied sighted subjects showed no pregnant visual cortex activity during the auditory job (Burton et al., 2002b).

These results attest to a robust capacity for cortical reorganization subsequent to unimodal sensory deprivation. The striking furnishings involve increased responsiveness to the spared modalities of touch and hearing in the visual cortical regions deprived of vision. It is probable that unanticipated cross-modal responses noted in visual cortex of blind people reflect a more general phenomenon. Thus, primary [Brodmann area (BA) 41] and higher level (BA 42 and 22) auditory cortices in deaf people respond to visual stimulation (Finney et al., 2001; Bavelier and Neville, 2002), which indicates that whatever severe unimodal deafferentation precipitates unexpected sensory access to the afflicted cortex. There is much contend on the mechanisms responsible for such examples of cross-modal plasticity (Bavelier and Neville, 2002). Brain imaging studies especially demonstrate that cross-modal alterations evidently persist throughout life considering late and early bullheaded subjects prove some comparable changes. However, the reorganizations noted in these two populations are not identical, which indicates that maturation and behavioral experience tin can influence which encephalon areas retain adaptive potential. The following discussion examines mechanisms and conditions mayhap responsible for enhanced processing of remaining modalities in deprived visual cortex.

Ane might explain all visual cortex responses in bullheaded people as an epiphenomenon with no functional function because the activity reflects nonspecific, excess excitability subsequent to sensory deprivation. Show of higher than normal glucose metabolism in early blind visual cortex (Wanet-Defalque et al., 1988; De Volder et al., 1997) is suggestive of possible instability in sensory-deprived cortex. This thought more often than not applies to individuals whose full lack of visual feel might induce abnormal responses (Snyder and Shapley, 1979) because exuberant excitatory connections are not pruned (Röder et al., 1997). Several findings bespeak that an explanation of nonfunctional hyperexcitability is unlikely for data such as that shown in Effigy i.

Contrary to an expectation of instability, visual cortex in blind people does not showroom lower excitability thresholds to transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). Thus, similar TMS levels evoke visual experience of phosphenes when applied over occipital cortex in some congenitally blind people, those who are blind but retain some light or move sensitivity, and sighted subjects (Gothe et al., 2002). However, TMS to occipital cortex elicits no phosphenes in most early blind subjects who take no previous visual function (Gothe et al., 2002). Nevertheless, another study demonstrated interference with Braille reading when TMS was practical to occipital visual areas in early blind subjects (Cohen et al., 1997, 1999), which indicates that occipital cortex contributes some part in these people.

It is unlikely that responses in visual cortex are nonspecific considering activity domains in many visual areas predominantly occupied confined parafoveal parts of retinotopic maps. In sighted subjects, focal activity patterns to visual stimulation generally constitute proof of restricted, and likely specific, functions. Thus, similarly localized activeness in bullheaded people possibly represents specific excitability. This is a parsimonious thought, even without knowing precise functions for the responses. Only higher tier visual regions like V7, V8, MT, and possibly LO exhibited fewer focal activity patterns in blind subjects. Still, retinotopic system in these regions is less precise in sighted subjects, which might explain the more widespread pattern of responses seen when these regions are activated in blind people. Additional regional specificity was axiomatic in the relative dominance of responses in the left hemisphere, which also varied with verb generation to Braille-read or heard nouns.

A likely basis for the all-encompassing visual cortex responses to heard nouns is a general sensitivity to various non-linguistic communication-related auditory stimuli in early (Kujala et al., 1995a,b, 1997; Röder et al., 1996, 2000, 2001; Lessard et al., 1998; Liotti et al., 1998; Leclerc et al., 2000; Weeks et al., 2000; Arno et al., 2001) and late blind (Kujala et al., 2000) individuals. A PET study, for example, showed V1 activity in early on bullheaded subjects during a sound localization task (Weeks et al., 2000). Of particular relevance to the question of whether cantankerous-modal responses serve an adaptive function is that several studies demonstrated superior performance past blind people when the tasks involved selective attention to some attribute of the auditory stimulation. Examples included detecting a deviant frequency (Kujala et al., 1995b), a particular tone in one ear with distracting sounds in the other ear (Liotti et al., 1998), and attending to a specific azimuth domain in a binaural sound localization task (Leclerc et al., 2000). The enhanced behavioral performance presumably reflects compensatory adaptations to loss of sight (Röder et al., 2001; Zatorre, 2001). A possible mechanism is probable coupled to the presence of visual cortex activation by auditory stimuli in bullheaded people.

A plausible caption for the results involving Braille reading is that visual cortex adapts by acquiring a capacity to process tactile stimuli. Consistent with this are PET studies that described V1 and adjacent visual cortex responses when early on bullheaded subjects actively explored and discriminated between Braille-similar stimuli (Sadato et al., 1996, 1998). These experiments confounded sensory and motor processes because subjects haptically explored the tactile stimuli. A subsequent fMRI study confirmed that tactile stimulus activation of visual cortex correlated with sensory processing because tactile discrimination was of passively practical Braille-like stimuli (Sadato et al., 2002). Most axiomatic were responses in early blind subjects who lost sight between <1–xv years of age (average <six years). Belatedly blind subjects (age range at onset of incomprehension: 20–51 years, average 33 years) showed lilliputian to no activity in V1 and adjacent regions (Sadato et al., 2002). This supports earlier negative findings of no TMS-induced disruption in Braille reading in late blind people (Cohen et al., 1999). These differences correlate with the age of blindness onset and suggest a limited sensitive period for adapting visual cortex to procedure tactile stimuli (Sadato et al., 2002).

Several issues circumspection categorically concluding that late blind people lack neural plasticity comparable with that observed in people with >12 years historic period of blindness onset. First, having any visual stimulus sensitivity might prevent novel adaptations. Thus, sighted subjects show no responses in visual cortex during simple tactile matching tasks, only five of vi belatedly blind subjects in the study by Sadato and colleagues (Sadato et al., 2002) had some binocular visual sensitivity to light or hand movements or both. This retained visual part might have inhibited adaptive changes to nonvisual modalities in the studied late bullheaded population. Second, functioning by the tardily bullheaded subjects was nearly at take a chance levels and contrasted with the >75% correct discriminations by the early blind. Absence of visual cortex responses in belatedly blind subjects therefore might reverberate unequal functioning in dissimilarity to inadequate neural plasticity. Finally, Sadato and colleagues (2002) used an analysis that potentially lacked sensitivity if hemodynamic responses in tardily bullheaded differed from those in early on blind subjects. Their analysis incorporated a hemodynamic response model into the design matrix equally a regressor, which could have reduced computed response magnitudes if hemodynamic responses in late blind subjects had different delays (Ollinger et al., 2001). The results shown in Effigy ane relied on an effect-related analysis wherein time courses were estimated and subsequently correlated with assumed hemodynamic responses. These methods revealed V1 and higher tier visual cortex action in individual late blind subjects (Burton et al., 2002a,b).

Given tactile stimulus activation of visual cortex, previously demonstrated responses in the same cortical regions during Braille reading mayhap reflect analyzing orthographic features associated with Braille prison cell tactile shapes (Melzer et al., 2001; Burton et al., 2002a). This interpretation implies that visual cortex activity represents the processing of Braille orthography every bit though it were impress. Consequent with this estimation are PET studies by Büchel and colleagues (1998a,b), whose subjects had to observe whether any Braille cell in a word or consonant cord included an elevated dot 6. This chore required processing Braille jail cell shape. They reported responses in V1 and higher visual areas but in belatedly blind subjects and in extrastriate regions in early blind subjects (Büchel et al., 1998a). The dot-detection task used in this study may have inadvertently favored activation in late blind subjects who attend more oftentimes to Braille jail cell shape when reading (Millar, 1997). This focus on Braille cell spatial patterns peradventure derives from previous visual experience in late blind individuals who, for similar reasons, are more practiced in tactile picture recognition tasks (Heller, 1989). When tactile discrimination tasks do not invoke previous visual experience, late bullheaded subjects show no reward and hence evidence diminished action in V1 (Sadato et al., 2002).

Several findings signal limited explanatory value to the hypothesis that visual cortex activity in blind people demonstrates just an adaptation to processing tactile stimuli and hence Braille orthography. First, the cortical network for orthography in bullheaded people is potentially comparable with the broad network recognized in sighted subjects (Tagamets et al., 2000) and therefore unlikely to be confined to visual cortex. Some other important component of this skepticism is that in bullheaded people Braille orthography recedes in significance with increased reading fluency (Millar, 1987, 1997; Davidson et al., 1992; Loomis, 1993). Braille reading fluency and visual cortex activity might so be expected to chronicle indirectly. In contrast, early on blind subjects, who usually read Braille amend than late bullheaded individuals, have greater activity in visual cortex (Fig. aneA ) (Burton et al., 2002a). These results contradict the idea that processing Braille orthography is a necessary component of visual cortex responses in early bullheaded people.

An alternative interpretation is that visual cortex activity indicates language processes. Two reports consistent with this thought show dissociations between tactile perceptions of Braille fields (i.e., Braille orthography) and literacy for the aforementioned object in early on blind subjects. A TMS experiment indicated that tactile stimulation associated with Braille reading recruits somatosensory cortex get-go. This study showed that TMS over parietal cortex xx msec after a Braille stimulus presentation interfered with stimulus detection, but TMS over occipital cortex blocked discrimination, but not detection, of Braille messages but after a longer delay of 50–eighty msec (Hamilton and Pascual-Leone, 1998). These results suggest that activeness in parietal cortex must precede the processes underlying letter recognition in occipital cortex. A similar dissociation betwixt tactile sensations and Braille literacy was reported in an early on bullheaded individual who suffered a bilateral occipital ischemic stroke. This patient later detected tactile stimulation associated with touching Braille fields but could not read them (Hamilton et al., 2000). Deficient Braille literacy in both instances might reverberate disrupted language processes operating in occipital cortex. However, the results might still exist interpretable equally disrupted processing of Braille orthography.

Visual cortex responses in blind people ostensibly bespeak language mechanisms normally hidden past visual stimulation effects of print in sighted subjects. A verb-generation chore involves obligatory semantic analyses of read and generated words (Gabrieli et al., 1998; Seger et al., 1999); this lexical process possibly evoked activity in early on and late blind subjects in V1 and multiple college visual cortex areas in the auditory job in which Braille reading was absent (Burton et al., 2002b). Similar positive findings for V1 responses in a PET study by Sadato and colleagues (Sadato et al., 1996, 1998) might have resulted from implicit semantic processing when subjects read Braille words (Gabrieli et al., 1998). Furthermore, left hemisphere authority of most activity, peculiarly in early on bullheaded subjects, indicates that visual cortex in blind people follows a left preference that is usual for many language processes (Geschwind and Galaburda, 1985; Petersen et al., 1990; Petersen and Fiez, 1993; Petitto et al., 2000).

The visual cortex responses elicited by verb generation to heard words provide suggestive evidence of language processes. We hypothesize that in Braille-literate blind people, heard words might be associatively linked to encoded Braille (Burton et al., 2002b) considering learning Braille after blindness requires prolonged practise in connecting the feel of Braille fields and phonics (Nolan and Kederis, 1969; Pring, 1985, 1994; Millar, 1997). The latter attach lexical meaning to the tactile sensations. It is possible, therefore, that Braille literacy is a lexical rather than primarily a haptic skill. Given the evidence of visual cortex activity, we speculate that this lexical processor partly exists in left visual cortex. Through prolonged associations, the lexical processor in visual cortex responds to heard words. The alternative statement is that visual cortex responds independently to auditory and tactile stimulation. Again, however, through associative coupling in learning Braille, these two modalities become linked in a lexical processor, which leads to the stronger and more than extensive activation of visual cortex noted to heard words (Fig. i). This hypothesis implies that rehabilitation supporting Braille literacy positively influences linguistic communication processes in visual cortex for listening and reading words.

Common, multimodal representations in the encephalon provide an important potential machinery that is responsible for visual cortex activity in bullheaded people. Brain imaging information similar that shown in Figure 1 signal substantial activation of several extrastriate regions with known multimodal responses (run into below). Thus, processes expressed in regions where representations from different modalities converge actuate multiple visual areas and might back up the abilities of blind people to read Braille, perform language tasks to heard words, and execute various tactile or auditory discrimination tasks that depend on some spatial noesis. Multimodal regions with cortical connections to lower tier somatosensory, auditory, and visual representations occur in posterior parietal, superior and heart temporal, and several extrastriate regions (Andersen et al., 1990; Felleman and Van Essen, 1991; Lewis and Van Essen, 2000; Falchier et al., 2002). A potential upshot of visual impecuniousness might be alteration of the ascendant flow of interactive controls through cortical connections linking different levels of visual cortex. Ane possibility is that activity in multimodal extrastriate regions provides stronger than normal top-downward influences on lower tier visual areas such as V1 (Sadato et al., 2002). Some of these furnishings might reflect the topography of cortical connections. For example, Falchier and colleagues (2002) reported in monkeys that cadre and neighboring auditory and multimodal temporal regions preferentially connect to V1 visual field representations at an eccentricity of ten–xx°. The absenteeism of directly projections to foveal representations in V1 parallels the lack of responses at this eccentricity shown in Figure 1 for both verb-generation tasks. These correlated findings emphasize how existing connections, the normal purpose of which is probable multimodal integration even at the earliest stages of visual processing, might influence activity in blind people.

The thought that extrastriate visual areas are a possible source of changes noted in blind people must consider evidence that these regions ordinarily contribute to performance of tactile tasks in sighted individuals. Several studies with sighted subjects evidence that selected tactile discriminations use visual processes in extrastriate visual areas. A PET report reported responses in portions of occipital–parietal visual cortex (BA 19) when sighted subjects discriminated differences in the orientation of tactile gratings (Sathian and Zangaladze, 2001). TMS aimed at this region disrupted discrimination of dissimilar grating orientations but non spacings betwixt tactile stimuli (Zangaladze et al., 1999). Sathian and colleagues (Sathian and Zangaladze, 2001) suggested that perceptions of tactile grating orientation required spatial mental imagery that is uniquely served by orientation-selective neurons located in these extrastriate visual regions. Another study (De Volder et al., 2001) identified foci in ventral visual regions, particularly in the left posterior fusiform gyrus (BA xix/37) and posterior inferotemporal gyrus (BA 37), when sighted and early blind subjects mentally imagined object shapes that were first recognized from commonly associated totem sounds or from haptic exploration. These findings illustrate cross-modal perceptual representations in the absence of vision. All active regions in these studies, however, occupied relatively higher tier extrastriate cortex.

On a broader level, these studies involving multimodal extrastriate regions have invoked mechanisms for mental imagery (Büchel et al., 1998a,b; Mellet et al., 2000; De Volder et al., 2001; Sathian and Zangaladze, 2001). Implied is that responses on the basis of mental imagery in blind people substantiate "visualization" of Braille fields or heard words in auditory linguistic communication tasks. The suggestion that the consequences of these events in extrastriate regions flow down to lower tier visual areas like V1 (Sadato et al., 2002) omits the possibility of direct interest of V1 in mental imagery tasks (Kosslyn et al., 1995, 2001; Thompson et al., 2001). The latter might explain how mental imagery mechanisms apply to tardily blind subjects who bear witness less activeness in the multimodal extrastriate regions.

Any hypothesis based on brain regions responsible for mental imagery does non fully explain the contradiction in early bullheaded people, who take the least experience with objects yet accept the greatest extent of activity in cortical areas involved in visual imagery. Despite some experience-based superiority in performing some tactile discrimination tasks (Stevens et al., 1996; Grant et al., 2000; Van Boven et al., 2000), early bullheaded people are also less adept at tasks requiring mental rotation of tactile stimuli (Sathian, 2000) or visuospatial and pictorial imagery (Aleman et al., 2001). These deficits might indicate limitations imposed past haptic feel when the tactile modality is the just sense available to cross-modal visual areas responsible for mental imagery (Aleman et al., 2001). It is therefore incongruous to suggest that early blind subjects "mentally visualized" Braille fields or heard nouns when doing verb generation because only these subjects showed activity in the appropriate extrastriate cortical regions. Information technology is besides implausible that verb generation in some bullheaded people arises from mental imagery when sighted and tardily blind subjects do the same task to heard nouns without activating comparable extrastriate regions.

Some studies alternatively interpret extrastriate visual cortex activity in blind people as representing normal object recognition, which likely engages mental imagery processes, however. In sighted people, LO is particularly active during multimodal object recognition tasks (Malach et al., 1995; Amedi et al., 2001; Grill-Spector et al., 2001). LO and regions in the inductive fusiform and junior temporal gyri also respond during tactile object recognitions in blind people (Büchel et al., 1998b). An fMRI study with sighted subjects and a tactile object recognition task identified a network of cortical areas that included responses in V1 (Deibert et al., 1999). An estimation of object recognition processes is partially applicable to results from early bullheaded people. Thus, Braille fields are putatively perceived as objects, specially in fluent readers who conceptualize whole words (Krueger, 1982). We previously also hypothesized that through haptic exploration, Braille fields elicit perceptual projections into the object space of each Braille cell pattern (Burton et al., 2002a). Although bonny, an object recognition hypothesis has express explanatory ability because comparable extrastriate regions are not seen in sighted or late blind subjects when they perform the aforementioned tasks.

Much of what has been discussed is past necessity speculative because of inadequate understanding of how severe unimodal sensory deprivation affects all of the cortical areas usually activated by vision. Encephalon imaging studies have revealed the extent of visual cortical reorganization in blind people and have highlighted some potential processes responsible for these changes. However, final that visual cortex activity in blind people represents testify of cortical reorganization raises questions about whether these results express normal processes found in sighted people, similar mental imagery, or indicate neural plasticity precipitated by severe sensory deprivation. A necessary aspect of because visual cortex activity in blind people as evidence of neural plasticity is identification of mechanism(s) and processes responsible for novel cross-modal activeness. Structural and neuro-development factors such every bit preservation of transient cross-modal connections from tactile and auditory thalamic centers to visual cortex, alterations in transient intracortical connections, and preservation of multimodal neurons in main sensory cortical areas are examples of issues best studied in animals (Bavelier and Neville, 2002). Although many of these processes potentially apply to early on bullheaded people, they take minimal application to the more varied results noted in tardily blind people. These people likewise have a more variable experience with sensory deprivation that has sometimes been ignored in making comparisons with results from early on bullheaded people. Behavioral variables such as previous and retained visual experience, exercise, equivalent performance success, and lexical processes (i.e., orthography, phonology, syntactics, and semantics) are all factors that have received less study. Enhancements or deficits in these behavioral variables and interactions betwixt the factors are likely to be complex. A meliorate understanding of cross-modal effects will depend on future studies that control and understand these interactions. This approach will potentially illuminate mechanisms underlying distinguishing patterns of brain action in late and early blind people.

These unanticipated findings on visual cortex action in bullheaded people would not be available with such all-encompassing detail without brain imaging technology. At that place are several crucial and unique aspects to the knowledge obtained through these studies. Especially important has been the shut clan between spatially distributed statistical assessments of brain activeness and whole brain anatomy. This standardization of data analyses through brain anatomy has been critically permissive in allowing comparisons across diverse studies. Because fMRI is noninvasive, there is no harm in repeatedly studying the same subjects. In this way, subtle alterations in experimental blueprint can be used to tease autonomously differences in activity patterns and thereby elucidate potential mechanisms for dynamic changes in brain activeness such every bit those seen in blind people. Some other valuable consideration is that these are human being studies. Every bit a event, nosotros have been able to examine language processes every bit a possible underlying functional ground for the observed visual cortex activity in bullheaded people. Comparisons betwixt visual versus nonvisual causes of responses in comparable visual cortex regions in sighted and blind people, respectively, have expanded appreciation of a very dynamic and malleable network the primordial responsiveness of which can change rather than but disappear after sensory deprivation. Furthermore, a conception of visual cortex functions that depend solely on analyses of unmarried neuron firing patterns in animals is too restrictive, peculiarly because BOLD responses correspond a broader spectrum of neurophysiological activity (Logothetis and Lauritzen, 2003). Perhaps of utmost importance to brain imaging studies, however, accept been perspectives based on examining results across specific anatomical structures throughout the whole brain, which is a view rarely possible with other technologies. Although not discussed above, we have noted, for case, that frontal cortex language areas in blind people exhibit a network identical to that observed in sighted individuals performing verb generation (Burton et al., 2002a,b). This ascertainment therefore accentuates visual cortex equally the main setting for neuroplasticity in these people.

Footnotes

This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant NS37237. I am peculiarly indebted to all of the blind people who participated in our studies and to Patti Schonlau, a instructor at the Missouri School for the Blind, who recruited these subjects. Vijay Raja contributed to information analyses and preparation of Figure i. I as well give thanks my colleagues Drs. E. Akbudak, T. Conturo, Thousand. McAvoy, J. Ollinger, M. Raichle, R. Sinclair, A. Snyder, and D. Van Essen for their many contributions.

Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. H. Burton, Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Campus Box 8108, Washington Academy School of Medicine, 660 Southward Euclid Avenue, St. Louis, MO 63110. Electronic mail: ude.ltsuw.hcuot@dlorah.

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Source: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3667661/

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