Posted on 10/10/2010 11:30:32 AM PDT by decimon
Part of the brain normally used for hearing is reorganized to enhance vision
Deaf or blind people often report enhanced abilities in their remaining senses, but up until now, no one has explained how and why that could be. Researchers at The University of Western Ontario, led by Stephen Lomber of The Centre for Brain and Mind have discovered there is a causal link between enhanced visual abilities and reorganization of the part of the brain that usually handles auditory input in congenitally deaf cats. The findings, published online in Nature Neuroscience, provide insight into the plasticity that may occur in the brains of deaf people.
Cats are the only animal besides humans that can be born deaf. Using congenitally deaf cats and hearing cats, Lomber and his team showed that only two specific visual abilities are enhanced in the deaf: visual localization in the peripheral field and visual motion detection. They found the part of the auditory cortex that would normally pick up peripheral sound enhanced peripheral vision, leading the researchers to conclude the function stays the same but switches from auditory to visual.
"The brain is very efficient, and doesn't let unused space go to waste," says Lomber, an associate professor in the Department of Physiology and Pharmacology at the Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry, and Department of Psychology in the Faculty of Social Science. "The brain wants to compensate for the lost sense with enhancements that are beneficial. For example, if you're deaf, you would benefit by seeing a car coming far off in your peripheral vision, because you can't hear that car approaching from the side; the same with being able to more accurately detect how fast something is moving."
Lomber and his team are trying to discover how a deaf brain differs from a hearing brain to better understand how the brain handles cochlear implants. If the brain has rewired itself to compensate for the loss of hearing, what happens when hearing is restored? "The analogy I use is, if you weren't using your cottage and lent it to a friend. That friend gets comfortable, maybe rearranges the furniture, and settles in. They may not want to leave just because you've come back," explains Lomber.
He also plans to conduct research to see if these changes in the brain also happen to those who could hear at one time, or if auditory experience prevents the changes from occurring.
###
The other authors on the paper are Andrej Kral of Medical University Hannover in Germany and Alex Meredith of Virginia Commonwealth University. The research was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.
Ping
Isn’t it pretty “normal” when you lose on sense the other senses pick up?
Sounds like a future “Fringe” eposide
I wear bifocals and my brain has learned to “see” differently without my glasses when I move my head up and down like I am wearing them
There was a Moody Science film, decades ago, in which a man with normal vision wore a special pair of “glasses” that made everything look upside down. In time, his brain adjusted and made everything right side up. After removing the glasses, everything was upside down until his brain, once more, made everything right.
One sense short and we will teach our brain how to operate with what we have.
I remember it well.
\ /__ __| ____|__ \ \ \ / | | / \ \ / | __| _| _/\_/ _| _| _)
I heard that!
Having lost much of my speech recognizing ability as an adult, I can vouch for the enhancement of other senses. I am an amazing good reader of body language. I also know many who have been deaf for many years and then implanted with cochlear implants and can hear again! They are amazing individuals. The have enhanced focusing abilities, are extremely well organized, and do well in many fields. They are marginal however in enjoyment of music.
Having lost much of my speech recognizing ability as an adult, I can vouch for the enhancement of other senses. I am an amazing good reader of body language. I also know many who have been deaf for many years and then implanted with cochlear implants and can hear again! They are amazing individuals. The have enhanced focusing abilities, are extremely well organized, and do well in many fields. They are marginal however in enjoyment of music.
It ain't necessarily so...
Using congenitally deaf cats and hearing cats, Lomber and his team showed that only two specific visual abilities are enhanced in the deaf: visual localization in the peripheral field and visual motion detection.Handicats?
Experimentin’ on kitty ping
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.