
DOUBLE DUTYBrain scans of sighted people show that visual motion is processed in the MT+/V5 area of the visual cortex (blue) while sound motion is processed in many areas in the brain (yellow), with a small amount of overlap (green). A man (Subject MM) who regained his sight after many years of blindness uses MT+/V5 for both sound and visual motion (green).Journal of Neuroscience
Old brains can learn new tricks but retain their knack for
lost senses.
A new study of two people who went blind while young and
regained sight as adults shows that blind people’s brains remember how to see
even when rewired for sound.
Scientists have known for some time that when a person loses
a sense, the brain rewires itself to use parts previously dedicated to the lost
sense. In blind people, for instance, vision centers can be remodeled to make
sense of sound or turned into touch-processing areas.
But rewired brains don’t erase the old vision-processing
software. Instead, sight and sound processors occupy the same space in the
brains of people with recovered vision, Melissa Saenz of the California
Institute of Technology and her colleagues show in a study published May 14 in
the Journal of Neuroscience.
Essentially, blind people’s brains allow hearing circuits to
squat on territory normally reserved for vision, Saenz says — and that’s not
surprising.
“This is a big part of the brain. It’s valuable real
estate,” she says. “What we didn’t know was how these new functions move in.”
In order to find out, Saenz and her colleagues studied two
people who regained sight as adults after many years of blindness: Mike May,
54, a businessman from California who lost his sight in a chemical accident
when he was 3 years old; and a 53-year-old woman who was blind from a young age
as a result of both retinopathy of prematurity and cataract growth. A cornea
and stem cell transplant when May was 46 partially restored his vision in one
eye. The woman had surgery to partially restore her sight at age 43.
Sighted people use a part of the visual cortex called MT+/V5 to see objects in
motion. Other parts of the visual cortex are responsible for recognizing faces
or stationary objects. Auditory motion, such as the sounds of a car driving
past or footsteps retreating down a hallway, is deciphered by a network of
brain areas, including an area adjacent to MT+/V5.
May and the other sight-restored volunteer used MT+/V5 for deciphering
both visual and sound motion, but not speech or other types of sights or
sounds.
That indicates that MT+/V5 shouldn’t
be thought of as exclusively a visual area or an auditory area, says Alvaro
Pascual-Leone, a neurologist at Harvard
Medical School
in Boston who
was not involved in the research. “It’s not a visual area per se; it’s a motion
area.”
Learning how the brain uses its real estate may improve therapies
for restoring vision and hearing, Pascual-Leone says. “Restoring visual input
is not enough for seeing,” he says. The brain must also be prepared to handle
the information.
May is still amassing an encyclopedia of clues to tell him
what he sees. “It wasn’t until I had the operation, took the bandages off and
started to see again that I was introduced to the intricacies of vision,” he
says.
He can see colors. Motion is no problem. But he’s terrible
with recognizing faces and objects.
“Why can I run and catch a ball, but I can’t recognize my
wife’s face,” he wonders.
The researchers in the new study didn’t test how well the
sight-restored people process motion information. It’s possible that having
both senses integrated in a single area could improve motion detection, or it
could hinder one or the other, says Franco Lepore, a cognitive neuroscientist
at the University
of Montreal.
He has studied similar phenomena in deaf people who have had
cochlear implants to help them hear again. Parts of the audio-processing areas
of deaf people’s brains get rewired to deal with vision. After hearing is restored,
competition in the auditory centers of the brain impair people’s ability to
decipher complex images while listening to sound, he says.
Regaining sight means getting another useful piece of
information about the world, May says, but he still uses sound and touch to
make sense of what he is seeing. And while the study shows that losing and
regaining his sight has changed his brain, May says the experiences haven’t
revolutionized his life.
“It’s life enriching. It hasn’t changed my life at all,” May
says. “It’s like going to another country or meeting a really neat person.
These things enrich your life, but they don’t change it in a profound way.
Having vision is great, but being blind is great too.”
Found in: Body & Brain
Diana Gainer