Burton Harold, Sinclair Robert J, McLaren Donald G
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110, USA.
Hum Brain Mapp. 2004 Dec;23(4):210-28. doi: 10.1002/hbm.20064.
Blind individuals show visual cortex activity during Braille reading. We examined whether such cross-modal activations reflect processing somatosensory stimuli independent of language by identifying cortical activity during a one-back vibrotactile matching task. Three groups (sighted, early-onset, and late-onset [>12 years] blind) detected whether paired vibrations (25 and 100 Hz), delivered to the right index finger, differed in frequency. Three successive paired vibrations, followed by a no-stimulation interval, were presented in a long event-related design. A fixed effects average z-score analysis showed increased activity throughout the visuotopic visual cortex, where it was mostly restricted to foveal and parafoveal eccentricities. Early blind showed the most extensive distribution of activity. Late blind exhibited activity mostly in similar regions but with declining response magnitudes with age of blindness onset. Three sighted individuals had suprathreshold activity in V1 but negative responses elsewhere in visual cortex. Mixed effects ANOVA confirmed group distinctions in defined regions (V1, V3, V4v, V7, LOC, and MT). These results suggest cross-modal adaptation to tactile stimulation in visual cortex independent of language processes. All groups showed increased activity in left primary (S1) and bilateral second somatosensory areas, but without response magnitude differences between groups throughout sensorimotor cortex. Early blind showed the greatest spatial extent of S1 activity. Blind participants had more extensive bilateral activity in anterior intraparietal sulcus and supramarginal gyrus. Extensive usage of touch in Braille reading may underlie observed S1 expansions in the reading finger representation. In addition, learned attentiveness to touch may explain similar expansion of parietal tactile attention regions.
盲人在阅读盲文时视觉皮层会出现活动。我们通过识别在一项单后振动触觉匹配任务中的皮层活动,来研究这种跨模态激活是否反映了独立于语言的体感刺激处理过程。三组受试者(视力正常者、早发性盲人以及晚发性[>12岁]盲人)检测传递到右手食指的成对振动(25赫兹和100赫兹)在频率上是否不同。在一个长时间的事件相关设计中,呈现三个连续的成对振动,随后是一个无刺激间隔期。固定效应平均z分数分析显示,在整个视皮层视觉区活动增加,且主要局限于中央凹和中央凹旁的偏心率区域。早发性盲人的活动分布最为广泛。晚发性盲人的活动大多出现在类似区域,但随着失明年龄的增长反应幅度下降。三名视力正常的受试者在V1区有阈上活动,但在视觉皮层的其他区域有负反应。混合效应方差分析证实了在特定区域(V1、V3、V4v、V7、LOC和MT)存在组间差异。这些结果表明,视觉皮层中存在独立于语言过程对触觉刺激的跨模态适应。所有组在左侧初级体感区(S1)和双侧第二体感区的活动均增加,但在整个感觉运动皮层中组间反应幅度没有差异。早发性盲人的S1活动空间范围最大。盲人参与者在前顶内沟和缘上回有更广泛的双侧活动。在盲文阅读中广泛使用触觉可能是观察到阅读手指表征中S1扩展的基础。此外,对触觉的习得性关注可能解释了顶叶触觉注意力区域的类似扩展。