| Literature DB >> 22970390 |
Giulia Dormal1, Franco Lepore, Olivier Collignon.
Abstract
Studies on visually deprived individuals provide one of the most striking demonstrations that the brain is highly plastic and is able to rewire as a function of the sensory input it receives from the environment. In the current paper, we focus on spatial abilities that are typically related to the dorsal visual pathway (i.e., spatial/motion processing). Bringing together evidence from cataract-reversal individuals, early- and late-blind individuals and sight-recovery cases of long-standing blindness, we suggest that the dorsal "spatial" pathway is mostly plastic early in life and is then more resistant to subsequent experience once it is set, highlighting some limits of neuroplasticity.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22970390 PMCID: PMC3433149 DOI: 10.1155/2012/687659
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neural Plast ISSN: 1687-5443 Impact factor: 3.599
Figure 1(a) Schematic representation of stimuli used to test the coherence threshold, a typical measure of sensitivity to global motion. Among randomly moving dots, the coherence threshold is the minimal percentage of dots moving in the same direction needed for the participant to accurately perceive this predominant direction of motion. Upper-panel represents a trial with 100% coherence as all the dots are moving in the upward direction. Bottom-panel represents a trial with 37% coherence, as 6 out of 16 dots are moving upward whereas the remaining 10 dots are moving in random directions. (b) Global motion coherence thresholds for each subject in the bilateral congenital and bilateral developmental groups tested in the study of Ellemberg et al. [17]. Circles represent the data from the better eyes and triangles represent the data from the worse eyes. The dashed line represents the mean of 24 sighted control subjects. Adapted with permission from [13, 17].
Summarizing table of brain coordinates (in MNI space) reported in PET and fMRI studies that investigated nonvisual spatial/motion processing in early blind individuals.
| Study | Task | Coordinates in MNI space |
|---|---|---|
|
Striem-Amit et al., [ | Location and form identification using a visual-to-auditory sensory substitution device (vOICE). | [Location > Form] × [Blind > Sighted]—whole brain |
| No activated clusters. | ||
| [Location > Form] in Blind—whole brain | ||
| No activated clusters in occipital and occipitotemporal cortices. | ||
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| ||
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Bedny et al., [ | Direction of motion judgment performed on receding and approaching moving sounds. | [High > Low motion] × [Blind > Sighted]—whole brain |
| L inferior temporal gyrus [−44, −72, −6] | ||
| L middle occipital gyrus [−38, −68, 2] | ||
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| ||
|
Bonino et al., [ | One-back spatial discrimination task performed on 2- and 3-dimensional tactile matrices. | [2D > 3D] in Blind—whole brain (only occipital/occipitotemporal activations are reported) |
| L cuneus [−19, −97, −3] | ||
| L middle occipital gyrus [−51, −75, 25] | ||
| L middle occipital gyrus [−35, −90, 11] | ||
| R middle occipital gyrus [38, − 85, 1] | ||
| R middle occipital gyrus [31, −87, 27] | ||
| L lateral occipital [−40, −60, −20] | ||
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| ||
|
Collignon et al., [ | Spatial discrimination versus pitch discrimination of pairs of sounds. | [Spatial > Pitch] × [Blind > Sighted]—whole brain |
| R cuneus hV3/V3A [12, −80, 22] | ||
| R middle occipital gyrus hMT+/V5 [48, −76, 6] | ||
| R middle occipitotemporal gyrus hMT+/V5 [40, −56, 12] | ||
| R Lingual gyrus [24, −48, −8] | ||
|
| ||
|
Gougoux et al., [ | Binaural and monaural sound localization. | [Monaural localization > Control ] × [Blind with superior performance > Sighted]—whole brain |
| R cuneus [13, −81, 15] | ||
| R lingual gyrus [15, −73, −6] | ||
| L cuneus [−13, −79, 9] | ||
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| ||
|
Matteau et al., [ | Motion detection task performed on moving versus static tactile stimuli delivered to the tong using a sensory substitution device, the tong display unit (TDU). | [Motion > Static] in blind—whole brain analyses (only occipital/occipitotemporal activations are reported) |
| R middle occipital gyrus [20, −88, 22] | ||
| R middle temporal gyrus hMT+/V5 [42, −54, −4] | ||
| L middle temporal gyrus hMT+/V5 [−44, −64, 2] | ||
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| ||
|
Poirier et al., [ | Motion detection task performed on horizontally moving sounds versus static sounds presented at different locations. | [Motion > Static] × [Blind > Sighted]—ROIs analyses |
| R cuneus V3/V3A [24, −88, 10] | ||
| L cuneus V3/V3A [−14, −84, 38] | ||
| R V1/V2 [2, −82, −8] | ||
| L V1/V2 [−24, −88, −8] | ||
| [Motion > Static] in blind (= Sighted)—ROIs analyses | ||
| R Inferior temporal gyrus hMT+/V5 [44, −72, −2] | ||
|
| ||
|
Renier et al., [ | One-back spatial versus frequency discrimination task performed on auditory and tactile stimuli. | [Spatial > Frequency] in Blind—whole brain—(only occipital activations are reported) |
| R middle occipital gyrus [51, −66, −10] | ||
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| ||
|
Ricciardi et al., [ | Passive tactile perception of moving versus static Braille-like dot patterns. | [Motion > Static tactile] in Blind—whole brain— (only occipital/occipitotemporal activations are reported) |
| R hMT+/V5 [38, −69, 7] | ||
| L hMT+/V5 [−45, −82, 5] | ||
| R LOC/LOtv [37, −55, −10] | ||
| L LOC/LOtv [−51, −65, −9] | ||
| V1/V2 [0, −92, −2] | ||
| R V1/V2 [37, −88, −4] | ||
| R cuneus V3A [8, −98, 20] | ||
|
| ||
|
Weeks et al., [ | Auditory spatial localization task. | [Localization > Rest] × [Blind > Sighted]—whole brain |
| R superior occipital gyrus [22, −79, 22] | ||
| R inferior occipital gyrus [40, −70, −9] | ||
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| ||
|
Wolbers et al., [ | Deviant target detection task within blocks of horizontally moving versus static sounds. | [Moving > Static sounds] in Blind—whole brain (only individual data in occipitotemporal cortices are reported) |
| Blind 1 | ||
| [−39, −61, 7]; [−54, −64, −2]; [39, −55, 10]; [42, −64, 10] | ||
| Blind 2 | ||
| [−39, −67, 4]; [−42, −70, 16]; [45, −64, 10] | ||
| Blind 3 | ||
| [−33, −76, 19]; [−48, −76, 13]; [39, −55, 10]; [45, −73, 16] | ||
| Blind 4 | ||
| [−48, −73, 13]; [−42, −61, 13]; [42, −64, 1] | ||
Figure 2(a) Red colored regions denote activations obtained in the study of Bedny et al. [37] from the contrast testing which regions show greater BOLD signal in response to auditory motion in the congenitally blind relative to the sighted controls, in high and low motion conditions relative to rest (left panel) and in the high motion condition relative to the low motion condition (right panel) (P < 0.05, corrected). White colored regions are activated in a sighted group of controls when viewing moving relative to stationary dots. The overlap between regions activated during auditory motion perception in the congenitally blind relative to the sighted, and the ones activated during visual motion perception in the sighted are colored in pink. (b) Percent signal change relative to baseline as a function of time (seconds) in response to auditory motion is displayed in left and right MT/MST ROIs (overlaid in red on a normalized template (left is left) and identified by means of a visual motion localizer in sighted participants) for sighted, congenitally blind, and late blind participants. Solid lines represent percent signal change in response to the high motion condition (footsteps) and dashed lines represent percent signal change in response to the low motion condition (tones). Adapted with permission from [37].
Figure 3(a) The left part of the figure illustrates the activations obtained in the study of Collignon et al. [38] from the contrast testing which regions are specifically dedicated to the spatial processing of sounds in early blind subjects relative to sighted controls: [Blind > Sighted] × [Spatial > Pitch]. Functional data are overlaid (uncorrected P < 0.001) over a 3D render of the brain (left is left). The right part of the figure displays psychophysiological interaction results using the two main activity peaks as seed areas. (b)The 3D brain representation (left is left) displays the projection of the site of TMS application in the study of Collignon et al. [51]. This area corresponds to the right dorsal extrastriate occipital cortex (BA 18). The histograms denote the average error rate in early blind and sighted subjects after sham (control) and real rTMS targeting the dorsal occipital stream during auditory tasks involving the discrimination of intensity, pitch and spatial location of sounds. The data show a significant increase of the error rate after real rTMS only in the early blind group and selectively for the sound location task. The histogram on the right bottom of the figure represents the percentage of errors in the spatial location task in early blind and sighted subjects for the real rTMS condition minus the sham TMS condition (isolating the effect of the TMS), as a function of sound position. Negative values on the x-axis are referring to the left external space, positive values on the x-axis are referring to the right external space. Adapted with permission from [38, 51].
Figure 4(a) The left part of the figure illustrates the activations obtained in the study of Collignon et al. [38] from the contrast testing which regions are more active for the spatial processing rather than the pitch processing of sounds ([Spatial > Pitch]) in early blind subjects only (red), and in both early blind and sighted participants (orange). Functional data are overlaid (uncorrected P < 0.001) over a 3D render of the brain (left is left). The right part of the figure shows beta parameter estimates relative to baseline for the spatial and the pitch conditions, in the sighted subjects and in the early blind participants at coordinate [48, − 54, 10]. (b) Activations obtained in the study of Saenz et al. [60] in six controls subjects (upper part of the figure) and in sight-recovery individual MM (lower part of the figure). Yellow colored regions show a positive difference when contrasting auditory motion to its static condition. Green and blue regions illustrate the overlap and non-overlap with visually defined MT+ in the same subjects. (c) In the same study, percent signal change in visually defined MT+ ROIs is plotted for moving relative to stationary visual stimuli and for moving relative to stationary auditory stimuli in six control sighted subjects (c1–c6) and in two sight-recovery individuals (MM and MS). Adapted with permission from [60].