AI Article Synopsis

  • Research shows that congenitally blind individuals have more non-visual brain activity in their visual cortex than sighted people, a phenomenon known as crossmodal plasticity.
  • A study on people who regained sight after being born blind indicates that their visual cortex shows altered responses to visual stimuli when sounds are present, unlike sighted control groups.
  • The findings suggest that the visual cortex retains this crossmodal activity even after sight recovery, hinting at significant brain development during the early stages of visual deprivation.

Article Abstract

Neuroscientific research has consistently shown more extensive non-visual activity in the visual cortex of congenitally blind humans compared to sighted controls; a phenomenon known as crossmodal plasticity. Whether or not crossmodal activation of the visual cortex retracts if sight can be restored is still unknown. The present study, involving a rare group of sight-recovery individuals who were born pattern vision blind, employed visual event-related potentials to investigate persisting crossmodal modulation of the initial visual cortical processing stages. Here we report that the earliest, stimulus-driven retinotopic visual cortical activity (<100 ms) was suppressed in a spatially specific manner in sight-recovery individuals when concomitant sounds accompanied visual stimulation. In contrast, sounds did not modulate the earliest visual cortical response in two groups of typically sighted controls, nor in a third control group of sight-recovery individuals who had suffered a transient phase of later (rather than congenital) visual impairment. These results provide strong evidence for persisting crossmodal activity in the visual cortex after sight recovery following a period of congenital visual deprivation. Based on the time course of this modulation, we speculate on a role of exuberant crossmodal thalamic input which may arise during a sensitive phase of brain development.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10803735PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s42003-023-05749-3DOI Listing

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