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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 87 No. 1 January 2002, pp. 589-607
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
1Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, 2Department of Neurology and Neurological Surgery, and 3Department of Radiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110
Burton, H.,
A. Z. Snyder,
T. E. Conturo,
E. Akbudak,
J. M. Ollinger, and
M. E. Raichle.
Adaptive Changes in Early and Late Blind: A fMRI Study of
Braille Reading. J. Neurophysiol. 87: 589-607, 2002. Braille reading depends on remarkable adaptations that
connect the somatosensory system to language. We hypothesized that the
pattern of cortical activations in blind individuals reading Braille
would reflect these adaptations. Activations in visual (occipital-temporal), frontal-language, and somatosensory cortex in
blind individuals reading Braille were examined for evidence of
differences relative to previously reported studies of sighted subjects
reading print or receiving tactile stimulation. Nine congenitally blind
and seven late-onset blind subjects were studied with fMRI as they
covertly performed verb generation in response to reading Braille
embossed nouns. The control task was reading the nonlexical Braille
string "######". This study emphasized image analysis in individual
subjects rather than pooled data. Group differences were examined by
comparing magnitudes and spatial extent of activated regions first
determined to be significant using the general linear model. The major
adaptive change was robust activation of visual cortex despite the
complete absence of vision in all subjects. This included foci in
peri-calcarine, lingual, cuneus and fusiform cortex, and in the lateral
and superior occipital gyri encompassing primary (V1), secondary (V2),
and higher tier (VP, V4v, LO and possibly V3A) visual areas previously identified in sighted subjects. Subjects who never had vision differed
from late blind subjects in showing even greater activity in
occipital-temporal cortex, provisionally corresponding to V5/MT and V8.
In addition, the early blind had stronger activation of occipital
cortex located contralateral to the hand used for reading Braille.
Responses in frontal and parietal cortex were nearly identical in both
subject groups. There was no evidence of modifications in frontal
cortex language areas (inferior frontal gyrus and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex). Surprisingly, there was also no evidence of an
adaptive expansion of the somatosensory or primary motor cortex dedicated to the Braille reading finger(s). Lack of evidence for an
expected enlargement of the somatosensory representation may have
resulted from balanced tactile stimulation and gross motor demands
during Braille reading of nouns and the control fields. Extensive
engagement of visual cortex without vision is discussed in reference to
the special demands of Braille reading. It is argued that these
responses may represent critical language processing mechanisms
normally present in visual cortex.
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