Literature DB >> 11423213

Plasticity in the adult human central auditory system: evidence from late-onset profound unilateral deafness.

C W Ponton1, J P Vasama, K Tremblay, D Khosla, B Kwong, M Don.   

Abstract

Experience-related changes in central nervous system (CNS) activity have been observed in the adult brain of many mammalian species, including humans. In humans, late-onset profound unilateral deafness creates an opportunity to study plasticity in the adult CNS consequent to monaural auditory deprivation. CNS activity was assessed by measuring long-latency auditory evoked potentials (AEPs) recorded from teens and adults with late-onset (post-childhood) profound unilateral deafness. Compared to monaurally stimulated normal-hearing subjects, the AEPs recorded from central electrode sites located over auditory cortical areas showed significant increases in inter-hemispheric waveform cross-correlation coefficients, and in inter-hemispheric AEP peak amplitude correlations. These increases provide evidence of substantial changes from the normal pattern of asymmetrical (contralateral > ipsilateral amplitude) and asynchronous (contralateral earlier than ipsilateral) central auditory system activation in the normal-hearing population to a much more symmetrical and synchronous activation in the unilaterally deaf. These cross-sectional analyses of AEP data recorded from the unilaterally deaf also suggest that the changes in cortical activity occur gradually and continue for at least 2 years after the onset of hearing loss. Analyses of peak amplitude correlations suggest that the increased inter-hemispheric symmetry may be a consequence of changes in the generators producing the N (approximately 100 ms peak latency) potential. These experience-related changes in central auditory system activity following late-onset profound unilateral deafness thus provide evidence of the presence and the time course of auditory system plasticity in the adult brain.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11423213     DOI: 10.1016/s0378-5955(01)00214-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hear Res        ISSN: 0378-5955            Impact factor:   3.208


  36 in total

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8.  Influence of single-sided deafness on the auditory capacity of the better ear.

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9.  Unilateral Hearing Loss: Understanding Speech Recognition and Localization Variability-Implications for Cochlear Implant Candidacy.

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10.  Results in Adult Cochlear Implant Recipients With Varied Asymmetric Hearing: A Prospective Longitudinal Study of Speech Recognition, Localization, and Participant Report.

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