AI Article Synopsis

  • Several studies indicate that losing a sense from birth can disrupt how we process multiple senses together, especially if certain developmental windows are missed.
  • This study focused on individuals who received cochlear implants at different ages to see how their multisensory abilities were affected.
  • Results showed that while both groups of deaf CI recipients could integrate sound and touch, those who were congenitally deaf responded slower compared to hearing controls, hinting that early sensory loss might alter how their brains process multisensory information even after gaining hearing.

Article Abstract

Several studies conducted in mammals and humans have shown that multisensory processing may be impaired following congenital sensory loss and in particular if no experience is achieved within specific early developmental time windows known as sensitive periods. In this study we investigated whether basic multisensory abilities are impaired in hearing-restored individuals with deafness acquired at different stages of development. To this aim, we tested congenitally and late deaf cochlear implant (CI) recipients, age-matched with two groups of hearing controls, on an audio-tactile redundancy paradigm, in which reaction times to unimodal and crossmodal redundant signals were measured. Our results showed that both congenitally and late deaf CI recipients were able to integrate audio-tactile stimuli, suggesting that congenital and acquired deafness does not prevent the development and recovery of basic multisensory processing. However, we found that congenitally deaf CI recipients had a lower multisensory gain compared to their matched controls, which may be explained by their faster responses to tactile stimuli. We discuss this finding in the context of reorganisation of the sensory systems following sensory loss and the possibility that these changes cannot be "rewired" through auditory reafferentation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4053428PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0099606PLOS

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