| Literature DB >> 15563723 |
Norihiro Sadato1, Tomohisa Okada, Manabu Honda, Ken-Ichi Matsuki, Masaki Yoshida, Ken-Ichi Kashikura, Wataru Takei, Tetsuhiro Sato, Takanori Kochiyama, Yoshiharu Yonekura.
Abstract
Sign language activates the auditory cortex of deaf subjects, which is evidence of cross-modal plasticity. Lip-reading (visual phonetics), which involves audio-visual integration, activates the auditory cortex of hearing subjects. To test whether audio-visual cross-modal plasticity occurs within areas involved in cross-modal integration, we used functional MRI to study seven prelingual deaf signers, 10 hearing non-signers and nine hearing signers. The visually presented tasks included mouth-movement matching, random-dot motion matching and sign-related motion matching. The mouth-movement tasks included conditions with or without visual phonetics, and the difference between these was used to measure the lip-reading effects. During the mouth-movement matching tasks, the deaf subjects showed more prominent activation of the left planum temporale (PT) than the hearing subjects. During dot-motion matching, the deaf showed greater activation in the right PT. Sign-related motion, with or without a lexical component, activated the left PT in the deaf signers more than in the hearing signers. These areas showed lip-reading effects in hearing subjects. These findings suggest that cross-modal plasticity is induced by auditory deprivation independent of the lexical processes or visual phonetics, and this plasticity is mediated in part by the neural substrates of audio-visual cross-modal integration.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15563723 DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhh210
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cereb Cortex ISSN: 1047-3211 Impact factor: 5.357