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By David F. Salisbury
November 30, 2001
Individuals
who have been blind from birth use different parts of their brain
when reading Braille than those who lost their sight early in life
… a difference that sheds new light on the relationship between
thought and language.
That is the conclusion of a study performed
by Vanderbilt researchers and reported in the November issue of
the scientific journal Human Brain Mapping. The research
is one of the latest efforts to understand the structure of the
human brain and how it responds to injury.
Twenty years ago most neuroscientists
thought that the adult human brain had a very limited ability to
reorganize itself following major injuries to the brain itself or
to the peripheral nervous system that provides it with sensory information.
In recent years, however, researchers have discovered that mature
brains, as well as developing brains, display more flexibility than
they had thought.
One way to study the phenomena associated
with brain plasticity is to examine differences in brain organization
in people who have lost their sight at an early age. In sighted
individuals, nearly one third of the brain is devoted to processing
visual information. Cutting off all sensory input to such a large
region of the cortex creates a situation where recruitment of some
of the unused areas by the other senses seems likely. So scientists
have looked for, and found, evidence that some of the areas of the
idle visual cortex can be recruited to process other types of sensory
information.
In 1996 a Japanese scientist, N. Sadato,
working at the National Institutes of Health, reported that positron
emission tomography (PET) scans averaged from the brains of several
blind subjects displayed activity in parts of the visual cortex
while reading Braille. It was unclear, however, to what extend this
activity might represent activation of visual memories that individuals
had acquired before they were blind and how much represented an
actual repurposing of visual areas of the brain to handle touch
information.
To help answer this question, Psychology
Professor Ford F. Ebner and Research Assistant Professor of Psychology
Peter Melzer - with technical assistance from members of Vanderbilt's
radiology department - turned to functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging
(fMRI), a technique can detect active areas of brain activity by
measuring activity-induced changes in blood flow.
In order to distinguish between activation
of visual memories and processing of touch information, the investigators
recruited a group of five men and five women, half of whom had been
blind since birth and half of whom lost their sight early in life.
The researchers reasoned that those who had been blind since birth
would not have had an opportunity to store up visual memories, so
all the brain activity that they exhibited in areas associated with
the visual system would be areas that had been recruited to process
sensory touch information.
The subjects were asked to read a series
of single words in Braille. Ten percent of the words were nouns
that referred to abstract concepts while 90 percent were nouns that
referred to objects associated with visual images.
FMRI takes snapshots of brain activity
much more quickly than PET scans, which must average brain activity
over several minutes and pool the data from several individuals.
By asking their subjects to alternate reading and resting, the researchers
were not only able to measure which areas become active but also
when the activation occurred relative to the initial stimuli. This
allowed them to differentiate between areas involved in the response
to the touch information and those that were not activated by act
of reading but by some type of higher-level processing.
Surprisingly, the researchers did not
find major differences in the magnitude and expanse of activation
in the visual cortex between the two groups. But they did find striking
differences in the activation behavior, the relationship between
the timing of the activation of specific visual areas and the task.
In the blind-from-birth group, activation of a region in the posterior
temporal lobe that is involved in phonological word processing -
keeping track of the sound patterns and rules of pronunciation in
speech - was more strongly correlated with reading than it was in
the group with some visual experience. Conversely, an adjacent region
associated with semantic word processing - determining the meaning
of similarly sounding words like flour and flower - had the stronger
correlation with the task in the group with some visual experience
than it did in the group that was blind from birth.
The researchers hypothesize that even
a short period of early visual experience may make it harder to
recruit certain areas in the visual cortex than is the case for
those who are blind for birth. They propose that this may be one
reason why those who are blind from birth tend to be much better
Braille readers than those who loose their sight later in life,
they say.
The study also provides new support
for the proposition that a kind of mental imagery exists which is
independent of the five senses. The subjects who were blind from
birth reported having non-visual associations with some of the words.
The areas of the brain that are involved in high-level processing
of the words in the study strongly suggest that this non-visual
imagery is closely related to language. So there is a good chance
that further studies may shed new light on an outstanding issue
in philosophy and psychology: the relationship between language
and thought.
Also contributing to the study were
Assistant Professor Victoria L. Morgan, Associate Professor David
R. Pickens and Professor Ronald R. Price from the department of
radiology and radiological services, and Robert S. Wall, assistant
professor of hearing and speech at Vanderbilt's Bill Wilkerson Center.
Funding was provided by the National
Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, the John F. Kennedy
Center for Research in Human Development at Vanderbilt University,
the Vanderbilt Vision Research Center, the Hobbs Foundation and
Dr. and Mrs. Irwin Eskind.

Ford Ebner's
home page:
http://bret.mc.vanderbilt.edu/cmn/cfm_files/view_facname.cfm?KeyNo=50
Summary of Kennedy Center research
on brain plasticity:
http://www.vanderbilt.edu/kennedy/topics/brainpl.html
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