Cortical plasticity for visuospatial processing and object recognition in deaf and hearing signers

Experience-dependent plasticity in deaf participants has been shown in a variety of studies focused on either the dorsal or ventral aspects of the visual system, but both systems have never been investigated in concert. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), we investigated functional p...

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Published inNeuroImage (Orlando, Fla.) Vol. 60; no. 1; pp. 661 - 672
Main Authors Weisberg, Jill, Koo, Daniel S., Crain, Kelly L., Eden, Guinevere F.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 01.03.2012
Elsevier Limited
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Summary:Experience-dependent plasticity in deaf participants has been shown in a variety of studies focused on either the dorsal or ventral aspects of the visual system, but both systems have never been investigated in concert. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), we investigated functional plasticity for spatial processing (a dorsal visual pathway function) and for object processing (a ventral visual pathway function) concurrently, in the context of differing sensory (auditory deprivation) and language (use of a signed language) experience. During scanning, deaf native users of American Sign Language (ASL), hearing native ASL users, and hearing participants without ASL experience attended to either the spatial arrangement of frames containing objects or the identity of the objects themselves. These two tasks revealed the expected dorsal/ventral dichotomy for spatial versus object processing in all groups. In addition, the object identity matching task contained both face and house stimuli, allowing us to examine category-selectivity in the ventral pathway in all three participant groups. When contrasting the groups we found that deaf signers differed from the two hearing groups in dorsal pathway parietal regions involved in spatial cognition, suggesting sensory experience-driven plasticity. Group differences in the object processing system indicated that responses in the face-selective right lateral fusiform gyrus and anterior superior temporal cortex were sensitive to a combination of altered sensory and language experience, whereas responses in the amygdala were more closely tied to sensory experience. By selectively engaging the dorsal and ventral visual pathways within participants in groups with different sensory and language experiences, we have demonstrated that these experiences affect the function of both of these systems, and that certain changes are more closely tied to sensory experience, while others are driven by the combination of sensory and language experience. ► We investigated the impact of sensory/language experience on both visual streams. ► We show a dichotomy for spatial vs. object processing in hearing and deaf subjects. ► Sensory experience-driven plasticity was found for spatial processing (dorsal stream). ► Sensory and language experience impacts face-selective regions in the ventral stream. ► This is the first effort to simultaneously examine both visual pathways in the deaf.
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Present address for Jill Weisberg: Laboratory for Language and cognitive Neuroscience, San Diego State University, 6495 Alvarado Road #200, San Diego, CA 92120
ISSN:1053-8119
1095-9572
1095-9572
DOI:10.1016/j.neuroimage.2011.12.031