Changes in connectivity after visual cortical brain damage underlie altered visual function.

The full extent of the brain's ability to compensate for damage or changed experience is yet to be established. One question particularly important for evaluating and understanding rehabilitation following brain damage is whether recovery involves new and aberrant neural connections or whether...

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Main Authors: Bridge, H, Thomas, O, Jbabdi, S, Cowey, A
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2008
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author Bridge, H
Thomas, O
Jbabdi, S
Cowey, A
author_facet Bridge, H
Thomas, O
Jbabdi, S
Cowey, A
author_sort Bridge, H
collection OXFORD
description The full extent of the brain's ability to compensate for damage or changed experience is yet to be established. One question particularly important for evaluating and understanding rehabilitation following brain damage is whether recovery involves new and aberrant neural connections or whether any change in function is due to the functional recruitment of existing pathways, or both. Blindsight, a condition in which subjects with complete destruction of part of striate cortex (V1) retain extensive visual capacities within the clinically blind field, is an excellent example of altered visual function. Since the main pathway to the visual cortex is destroyed, the spared or recovered visual ability must arise from either an existing alternative pathway, or the formation of a new pathway. Using diffusion-weighted MRI, we show that both controls and blindsight subject GY, whose left V1 is destroyed, show an ipsilateral pathway between LGN (lateral geniculate nucleus) and human motion area MT+/V5 (bypassing V1). However, in addition, GY shows two major features absent in controls: (i) a contralateral pathway from right LGN to left MT+/V5, (ii) a substantial cortico-cortical connection between MT+/V5 bilaterally. Both observations are consistent with previous functional MRI data from GY showing enhanced ipsilateral activation in MT+/V5. There is also evidence for a pathway in GY from left LGN to right MT+/V5, although the lesion makes its quantification difficult. This suggests that employing alternative brain regions for processing of information following cortical damage in childhood may strengthen or establish specific connections.
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spelling oxford-uuid:5438bfa4-c66f-4b0d-b92a-768559012f822022-03-26T16:36:25ZChanges in connectivity after visual cortical brain damage underlie altered visual function.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:5438bfa4-c66f-4b0d-b92a-768559012f82EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2008Bridge, HThomas, OJbabdi, SCowey, AThe full extent of the brain's ability to compensate for damage or changed experience is yet to be established. One question particularly important for evaluating and understanding rehabilitation following brain damage is whether recovery involves new and aberrant neural connections or whether any change in function is due to the functional recruitment of existing pathways, or both. Blindsight, a condition in which subjects with complete destruction of part of striate cortex (V1) retain extensive visual capacities within the clinically blind field, is an excellent example of altered visual function. Since the main pathway to the visual cortex is destroyed, the spared or recovered visual ability must arise from either an existing alternative pathway, or the formation of a new pathway. Using diffusion-weighted MRI, we show that both controls and blindsight subject GY, whose left V1 is destroyed, show an ipsilateral pathway between LGN (lateral geniculate nucleus) and human motion area MT+/V5 (bypassing V1). However, in addition, GY shows two major features absent in controls: (i) a contralateral pathway from right LGN to left MT+/V5, (ii) a substantial cortico-cortical connection between MT+/V5 bilaterally. Both observations are consistent with previous functional MRI data from GY showing enhanced ipsilateral activation in MT+/V5. There is also evidence for a pathway in GY from left LGN to right MT+/V5, although the lesion makes its quantification difficult. This suggests that employing alternative brain regions for processing of information following cortical damage in childhood may strengthen or establish specific connections.
spellingShingle Bridge, H
Thomas, O
Jbabdi, S
Cowey, A
Changes in connectivity after visual cortical brain damage underlie altered visual function.
title Changes in connectivity after visual cortical brain damage underlie altered visual function.
title_full Changes in connectivity after visual cortical brain damage underlie altered visual function.
title_fullStr Changes in connectivity after visual cortical brain damage underlie altered visual function.
title_full_unstemmed Changes in connectivity after visual cortical brain damage underlie altered visual function.
title_short Changes in connectivity after visual cortical brain damage underlie altered visual function.
title_sort changes in connectivity after visual cortical brain damage underlie altered visual function
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AT thomaso changesinconnectivityaftervisualcorticalbraindamageunderliealteredvisualfunction
AT jbabdis changesinconnectivityaftervisualcorticalbraindamageunderliealteredvisualfunction
AT coweya changesinconnectivityaftervisualcorticalbraindamageunderliealteredvisualfunction