Burton H, Snyder A Z, Diamond J B, Raichle M E
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110, USA.
J Neurophysiol. 2002 Dec;88(6):3359-71. doi: 10.1152/jn.00129.2002.
Literacy for blind people requires learning Braille. Along with others, we have shown that reading Braille activates visual cortex. This includes striate cortex (V1), i.e., banks of calcarine sulcus, and several higher visual areas in lingual, fusiform, cuneus, lateral occipital, inferior temporal, and middle temporal gyri. The spatial extent and magnitude of magnetic resonance (MR) signals in visual cortex is greatest for those who became blind early in life. Individuals who lost sight as adults, and subsequently learned Braille, still exhibited activity in some of the same visual cortex regions, especially V1. These findings suggest these visual cortex regions become adapted to processing tactile information and that this cross-modal neural change might support Braille literacy. Here we tested the alternative hypothesis that these regions directly respond to linguistic aspects of a task. Accordingly, language task performance by blind persons should activate the same visual cortex regions regardless of input modality. Specifically, visual cortex activity in blind people ought to arise during a language task involving heard words. Eight early blind, six late blind, and eight sighted subjects were studied using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during covert generation of verbs to heard nouns. The control task was passive listening to indecipherable sounds (reverse words) matched to the nouns in sound intensity, duration, and spectral content. Functional responses were analyzed at the level of individual subjects using methods based on the general linear model and at the group level, using voxel based ANOVA and t-test analyses. Blind and sighted subjects showed comparable activation of language areas in left inferior frontal, dorsolateral prefrontal, and left posterior superior temporal gyri. The main distinction was bilateral, left dominant activation of the same visual cortex regions previously noted with Braille reading in all blind subjects. The spatial extent and magnitude of responses was greatest on the left in early blind individuals. Responses in the late blind group mostly were confined to V1 and nearby portions of the lingual and fusiform gyri. These results confirm the presence of adaptations in visual cortex of blind people but argue against the notion that this activity during Braille reading represents somatosensory (haptic) processing. Rather, we suggest that these responses can be most parsimoniously explained in terms of linguistic operations. It remains possible that these responses represent adaptations which initially are for processing either sound or touch, but which are later generalized to the other modality during acquisition of Braille reading skills.
盲人识字需要学习盲文。我们和其他人已经表明,阅读盲文会激活视觉皮层。这包括纹状皮层(V1),即距状沟两岸,以及舌回、梭状回、楔叶、枕外侧叶、颞下叶和颞中回中的几个高级视觉区域。对于那些早年失明的人来说,视觉皮层中磁共振(MR)信号的空间范围和强度最大。成年后失明并随后学习盲文的人,在一些相同的视觉皮层区域仍表现出活动,尤其是V1。这些发现表明,这些视觉皮层区域变得适应于处理触觉信息,并且这种跨模态神经变化可能支持盲文识字能力。在这里,我们检验了另一种假设,即这些区域直接对任务的语言方面做出反应。因此,盲人的语言任务表现应该会激活相同的视觉皮层区域,而不管输入方式如何。具体来说,盲人在涉及听到单词的语言任务中应该会出现视觉皮层活动。我们使用功能磁共振成像(fMRI)对8名早期失明者、6名晚期失明者和8名视力正常者在听到名词后暗中生成动词的过程进行了研究。对照任务是被动聆听与名词在声音强度、持续时间和频谱内容上匹配的无法辨认的声音(倒序单词)。使用基于一般线性模型的方法在个体受试者水平上分析功能反应,并在组水平上使用基于体素的方差分析和t检验分析。盲人和视力正常的受试者在左下额叶、背外侧前额叶和左后颞上回的语言区域表现出可比的激活。主要区别在于,所有盲人受试者中,与之前阅读盲文时相同的视觉皮层区域出现了双侧、左侧占主导的激活。早期失明个体中,反应的空间范围和强度在左侧最大。晚期失明组的反应大多局限于V1以及舌回和梭状回的附近部分。这些结果证实了盲人视觉皮层中存在适应性变化,但反对盲文阅读期间的这种活动代表躯体感觉(触觉)处理的观点。相反,我们认为这些反应可以用语言操作来最简洁地解释。这些反应仍有可能代表最初用于处理声音或触觉的适应性变化,但在获得盲文阅读技能的过程中后来被推广到另一种模态。