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Effects of auditory and visual deprivation on human brain development

Identifieur interne : 001449 ( Istex/Corpus ); précédent : 001448; suivant : 001450

Effects of auditory and visual deprivation on human brain development

Auteurs : Helen J. Neville ; Daphne Bavelier

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RBID : ISTEX:9B44C11594E907BE345C3F173AEA7F40432D3EC4

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Abstract

Brain imaging studies of congenitally deaf and congenitally blind adults are summarized. The results suggest that different subsystems within vision and audition display different degrees of experience-dependent modification of cortical organization. Within vision, the organization of systems important in processing peripheral space and motion information is most altered following auditory deprivation. Within audition, fast auditory processing and attention to and localization within peripheral space is enhanced following visual deprivation. Hypotheses concerning the origins of these differential effects of early experience are discussed.

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DOI: 10.1016/S1566-2772(01)00011-1

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ISTEX:9B44C11594E907BE345C3F173AEA7F40432D3EC4

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<abstract lang="en">Brain imaging studies of congenitally deaf and congenitally blind adults are summarized. The results suggest that different subsystems within vision and audition display different degrees of experience-dependent modification of cortical organization. Within vision, the organization of systems important in processing peripheral space and motion information is most altered following auditory deprivation. Within audition, fast auditory processing and attention to and localization within peripheral space is enhanced following visual deprivation. Hypotheses concerning the origins of these differential effects of early experience are discussed.</abstract>
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