de Heering Adélaïde, Dormal Giulia, Pelland Maxime, Lewis Terri, Maurer Daphne, Collignon Olivier
UNESCOG, Center for Cognition & Neurosciences, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Avenue F. Roosevelt, 50 CP 191, 1050 Bruxelles, Belgium.
Biological Psychology and Neuropsychology, University of Hamburg, Von-Melle-Park 11, 20146 Hamburg, Germany; Centre de Recherche en Neuropsychologie et Cognition (CERNEC), Université de Montréal, Marie-Victorin Building, Station Centre-ville, Montréal, QC H3C 3J7, Canada; Institute of Research in Psychology (IPSY) and in Neuroscience (IoNS), University of Louvain, Place du Cardinal Mercier 10, 1348 Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium.
Curr Biol. 2016 Nov 21;26(22):3101-3105. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2016.10.014. Epub 2016 Nov 10.
Is a short and transient period of visual deprivation early in life sufficient to induce lifelong changes in how we attend to, and integrate, simple visual and auditory information [1, 2]? This question is of crucial importance given the recent demonstration in both animals and humans that a period of blindness early in life permanently affects the brain networks dedicated to visual, auditory, and multisensory processing [1-16]. To address this issue, we compared a group of adults who had been treated for congenital bilateral cataracts during early infancy with a group of normally sighted controls on a task requiring simple detection of lateralized visual and auditory targets, presented alone or in combination. Redundancy gains obtained from the audiovisual conditions were similar between groups and surpassed the reaction time distribution predicted by Miller's race model. However, in comparison to controls, cataract-reversal patients were faster at processing simple auditory targets and showed differences in how they shifted attention across modalities. Specifically, they were faster at switching attention from visual to auditory inputs than in the reverse situation, while an opposite pattern was observed for controls. Overall, these results reveal that the absence of visual input during the first months of life does not prevent the development of audiovisual integration but enhances the salience of simple auditory inputs, leading to a different crossmodal distribution of attentional resources between auditory and visual stimuli.
生命早期短暂的视觉剥夺期是否足以引发我们在处理和整合简单视觉与听觉信息方式上的终身变化[1, 2]?鉴于近期在动物和人类身上的研究表明,生命早期的一段失明期会永久性地影响负责视觉、听觉和多感官处理的大脑网络[1 - 16],这个问题至关重要。为解决这个问题,我们将一组在婴儿早期接受过先天性双侧白内障治疗的成年人与一组视力正常的对照组进行了比较,他们完成的任务是简单检测单独呈现或组合呈现的侧向视觉和听觉目标。两组从视听条件中获得的冗余增益相似,且超过了米勒竞赛模型预测的反应时间分布。然而,与对照组相比,白内障逆转患者在处理简单听觉目标时更快,并且在跨模态转移注意力的方式上存在差异。具体而言,他们从视觉输入切换到听觉输入的速度比反向情况更快,而对照组则观察到相反的模式。总体而言,这些结果表明,生命最初几个月缺乏视觉输入并不会阻止视听整合的发展,而是增强了简单听觉输入的显著性,导致听觉和视觉刺激之间注意力资源的跨模态分布不同。