AI Article Synopsis

  • Research indicates that brain functions adapt based on sensory experiences, exploring differences between blind and sighted individuals.
  • The study compares functional connectivity in blind adults, sighted adults, and a large group of sighted infants, revealing that infant visual cortices more closely resemble those of blind adults.
  • The findings suggest that visual experiences are necessary for developing certain brain connections, with variations in connectivity patterns observed between primary visual cortices and higher cognitive areas in both sighted and blind individuals.

Article Abstract

Comparisons across adults with different sensory histories (blind vs. sighted) have uncovered effects of experience on human brain function. In people born blind visual cortices are responsive to non-visual tasks and show altered functional connectivity at rest. Since almost all research has been done with adults, little is known about the developmental origins of this plasticity. Are infant visual cortices initially functionally like those of sighted adults and blindness causes reorganization? Alternatively, do infants start like blind adults, with vision required to set up the sighted pattern? To distinguish between these possibilities, we compare resting state functional connectivity across blind (n = 30) and blindfolded sighted (n = 50) adults to a large cohort of sighted infants (Developing Human Connectome Project, n = 475). Remarkably, we find that infant secondary visual cortices functionally resemble those of blind more than sighted adults, consistent with the idea that visual experience is required to set up long-range functional connectivity. Primary visual cortices show a mixture of instructive effects of vision and reorganizing effects of blindness. Specifically, in sighted adults, visual cortices show stronger functional coupling with nonvisual sensory-motor networks (i.e., auditory, somatosensory/motor) than with higher-cognitive prefrontal cortices (PFC). In blind adults, visual cortices show stronger coupling with PFC. In infants, connectivity of secondary visual cortices is stronger with PFC, while V1 shows equal sensory-motor/PFC connectivity. In contrast, lateralization of occipital-to-frontal connectivity resembles the sighted adults at birth and is reorganized by blindness, possibly due to recruitment of occipital networks for lateralized cognitive functions, such as language.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9980152PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.02.21.528939DOI Listing

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