Bola Łukasz, Zimmermann Maria, Mostowski Piotr, Jednoróg Katarzyna, Marchewka Artur, Rutkowski Paweł, Szwed Marcin
Department of Psychology, Jagiellonian University, 30-060 Krakow, Poland.
Laboratory of Brain Imaging, Neurobiology Center, Nencki Institute of Experimental Biology, Polish Academy of Sciences, 02-093 Warsaw, Poland.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2017 Jan 24;114(4):E600-E609. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1609000114. Epub 2017 Jan 9.
The principles that guide large-scale cortical reorganization remain unclear. In the blind, several visual regions preserve their task specificity; ventral visual areas, for example, become engaged in auditory and tactile object-recognition tasks. It remains open whether task-specific reorganization is unique to the visual cortex or, alternatively, whether this kind of plasticity is a general principle applying to other cortical areas. Auditory areas can become recruited for visual and tactile input in the deaf. Although nonhuman data suggest that this reorganization might be task specific, human evidence has been lacking. Here we enrolled 15 deaf and 15 hearing adults into an functional MRI experiment during which they discriminated between temporally complex sequences of stimuli (rhythms). Both deaf and hearing subjects performed the task visually, in the central visual field. In addition, hearing subjects performed the same task in the auditory modality. We found that the visual task robustly activated the auditory cortex in deaf subjects, peaking in the posterior-lateral part of high-level auditory areas. This activation pattern was strikingly similar to the pattern found in hearing subjects performing the auditory version of the task. Although performing the visual task in deaf subjects induced an increase in functional connectivity between the auditory cortex and the dorsal visual cortex, no such effect was found in hearing subjects. We conclude that in deaf humans the high-level auditory cortex switches its input modality from sound to vision but preserves its task-specific activation pattern independent of input modality. Task-specific reorganization thus might be a general principle that guides cortical plasticity in the brain.
指导大规模皮质重组的原理仍不清楚。在盲人中,几个视觉区域保留了它们的任务特异性;例如,腹侧视觉区域开始参与听觉和触觉物体识别任务。任务特异性重组是否仅见于视觉皮层,或者这种可塑性是否是适用于其他皮质区域的一般原则,这一点仍不明确。在聋人中,听觉区域可以被用于处理视觉和触觉输入。尽管非人类的数据表明这种重组可能是任务特异性的,但一直缺乏人类证据。在这里,我们招募了15名聋人和15名听力正常的成年人参与一项功能磁共振成像实验,在此期间他们要区分时间上复杂的刺激序列(节奏)。聋人和听力正常的受试者都在中央视野以视觉方式执行任务。此外,听力正常的受试者以听觉方式执行相同的任务。我们发现,视觉任务在聋人受试者中强烈激活了听觉皮层,在高级听觉区域的后外侧部分达到峰值。这种激活模式与在执行该任务听觉版本的听力正常受试者中发现的模式惊人地相似。尽管在聋人受试者中执行视觉任务会导致听觉皮层与背侧视觉皮层之间的功能连接增加,但在听力正常的受试者中未发现这种效应。我们得出结论,在聋人中,高级听觉皮层将其输入模式从声音切换为视觉,但保留了其独立于输入模式的任务特异性激活模式。因此,任务特异性重组可能是指导大脑皮质可塑性的一般原则。