AI Article Synopsis

  • Conducted a study using fMRI to analyze brain responses during sign language, picture, and word processing tasks in 35 deaf participants versus 35 hearing participants.
  • Deaf individuals showed significant brain activation in specific regions during sign language and picture processing, revealing adaptations in their neural pathways due to auditory deprivation.
  • The study highlighted unique activation patterns and connectivity in the deaf population, suggesting compensatory mechanisms in their language processing compared to hearing counterparts.

Article Abstract

Employing functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) techniques, we conducted a comprehensive analysis of neural responses during sign language, picture, and word processing tasks in a cohort of 35 deaf participants and contrasted these responses with those of 35 hearing counterparts. Our voxel-based analysis unveiled distinct patterns of brain activation during language processing tasks. Deaf individuals exhibited robust bilateral activation in the superior temporal regions during sign language processing, signifying the profound neural adaptations associated with sign comprehension. Similarly, during picture processing, the deaf cohort displayed activation in the right angular, right calcarine, right middle temporal, and left angular gyrus regions, elucidating the neural dynamics engaged in visual processing tasks. Intriguingly, during word processing, the deaf group engaged the right insula and right fusiform gyrus, suggesting compensatory mechanisms at play during linguistic tasks. Notably, the control group failed to manifest additional or distinctive regions in any of the tasks when compared to the deaf cohort, underscoring the unique neural signatures within the deaf population. Multivariate Pattern Analysis (MVPA) of functional connectivity provided a more nuanced perspective on connectivity patterns across tasks. Deaf participants exhibited significant activation in a myriad of brain regions, including bilateral planum temporale (PT), postcentral gyrus, insula, and inferior frontal regions, among others. These findings underscore the intricate neural adaptations in response to auditory deprivation. Seed-based connectivity analysis, utilizing the PT as a seed region, revealed unique connectivity pattern across tasks. These connectivity dynamics provide valuable insights into the neural interplay associated with cross-modal plasticity.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11682-024-00878-7DOI Listing

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