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Brain Plasticity in Blind Subjects Centralizes Beyond the Modal Cortices

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2016

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Frontiers Media S.A.
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Ortiz-Terán, Laura, Tomás Ortiz, David L. Perez, Jose Ignacio Aragón, Ibai Diez, Alvaro Pascual-Leone, and Jorge Sepulcre. 2016. “Brain Plasticity in Blind Subjects Centralizes Beyond the Modal Cortices.” Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience 10 (1): 61. doi:10.3389/fnsys.2016.00061. http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnsys.2016.00061.

Abstract

It is well established that the human brain reorganizes following sensory deprivations. In blind individuals, visual processing regions including the lateral occipital cortex (LOC) are activated by auditory and tactile stimuli as demonstrated by neurophysiological and neuroimaging investigations. The mechanisms for such plasticity remain unclear, but shifts in connectivity across existing neural networks appear to play a critical role. The majority of research efforts to date have focused on neuroplastic changes within visual unimodal regions, however we hypothesized that neuroplastic alterations may also occur in brain networks beyond the visual cortices including involvement of multimodal integration regions and heteromodal cortices. In this study, two recently developed graph-theory based functional connectivity analyses, interconnector analyses and local and distant connectivity, were applied to investigate functional reorganization in regional and distributed neural-systems in late-onset blind (LB) and congenitally blind (CB) cohorts each compared to their own group of sighted controls. While functional network alterations as measured by the degree of differential links (DDL) occurred in sensory cortices, neuroplastic changes were most prominent within multimodal and association cortices. Subjects with LB showed enhanced multimodal integration connections in the parieto-opercular, temporoparietal junction (TPJ) and ventral premotor (vPM) regions, while CB individuals exhibited increased superior parietal cortex (SPC) connections. This study reveals the critical role of recipient multi-sensory integration areas in network reorganization and cross-modal plasticity in blind individuals. These findings suggest that aspects of cross-modal neuroplasticity and adaptive sensory-motor and auditory functions may potentially occur through reorganization in multimodal integration regions.

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congenital blind, fMRI, functional connectivity, late-onset blind, multimodal integration network

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I am an Orientation and Mobility Specialist teaching blind and vision impaired adults how to get around. I am doing a presentation next week and the access to this article helped me in the research into brain plasticity as it applies to blind people.