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White matter connectivity between occipital and temporal regions involved in face and voice processing in hearing and early deaf individuals

White matter connectivity between occipital and temporal regions involved in face and voice processing in hearing and early deaf individuals

来源:bioRxiv_logobioRxiv
英文摘要

Abstract Neuroplasticity following sensory deprivation has long inspired neuroscience research in the quest of understanding how sensory experience and genetics interact in developing the brain functional and structural architecture. Many studies have shown that sensory deprivation can lead to cross-modal functional recruitment of sensory deprived cortices. Little is known however about how structural reorganization may support these functional changes. In this study, we examined early deaf, hearing signer and hearing non-signer individuals using diffusion MRI to evaluate the potential structural connectivity linked to the functional recruitment of the temporal voice area by face stimuli in deaf individuals. More specifically, we characterized the structural connectivity between occipital, fusiform and temporal regions typically supporting voice- and face-selective processing. Despite the extensive functional reorganization for face processing in the temporal cortex of the deaf, macroscopic properties of these connections did not differ across groups. However, both occipito- and fusiform-temporal connections showed significant microstructural changes between groups (fractional anisotropy reduction, radial diffusivity increase). We propose that the reorganization of temporal regions after early auditory deprivation builds on intrinsic and mainly preserved anatomical connectivity between functionally specific temporal and occipital regions. HighlightsMacrostructural connectivity of the face-voice system is preserved in early deafnessEarly deafness impacts on the microstructural connectivity of the face-voice systemBoth genetics and experience shape structural connections in the face-voice systemInnate anatomical networks might constrain the expression of cross-modal plasticity AbbreviationsSTGSuperior Temporal GyrusSTSSuperior Temporal SulcuspSTSPosterior superior Temporal SulcusFFAFace-fusiform AreaV2/3Boundary between Extrastriate V2 and V3 AreasTVATemporal Voice-sensitive Area

Jovicich Jorge、Novello Lisa、Rabini Giuseppe、Collignon Olivier、Benetti Stefania、Maffei Chiara

Center for Mind/Brain Studies, University of TrentoCenter for Mind/Brain Studies, University of TrentoCenter for Mind/Brain Studies, University of TrentoCenter for Mind/Brain Studies, University of Trento||Institute of Research in Psychology (IPSY) and in Neuroscience (IoNS), University of LouvainCenter for Mind/Brain Studies, University of TrentoAthinoula A. Martinos Center, Massachusetts General Hospital

10.1101/339713

生物科学理论、生物科学方法

Cross-modal plasticityAnatomical-functional connectivityDeafnessDiffusion-based tractographyTemporal voice area

Jovicich Jorge,Novello Lisa,Rabini Giuseppe,Collignon Olivier,Benetti Stefania,Maffei Chiara.White matter connectivity between occipital and temporal regions involved in face and voice processing in hearing and early deaf individuals[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-04-29].https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/339713.点此复制

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