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When:
Friday, October 01, 12:30 p.m.
Where: Room 115 - Conference Room Mellon Institute
Dr Ehud Zohary, Department of Neurobiology, Hebrew University, Jerusalem
Colloquium at Center for Neural Basis of Cognition
Abstract: The visual cortex may be more modifiable than previously considered. Using
fMRI in ten congenitally blind participants, we report robust occipital
activation during a verbal-memory task (in the absence of any sensory
input), as well as during verb-generation and Braille reading. We also
found evidence for reorganization and specialization of the occipital
cortex, along the anterior-posterior axis. While anterior regions showed
preference for Braille, posterior regions (including V1) demonstrated
preference for verbal-memory and verb-generation (which both require
memory of verbal material). No such occipital activation was found in
sighted. This difference between the groups was mirrored by superior
performance of the blind in various verbal-memory tasks. Moreover, the
magnitude of V1 activation during the verbal-memory condition was highly
correlated with the blind individual's abilities in a variety of
verbal-memory tests, suggesting that the additional occipital activation
may have a functional role.
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