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      Decoding Visual Location From Neural Patterns in the Auditory Cortex of the Congenitally Deaf

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          Abstract

          Sensory cortices of individuals who are congenitally deprived of a sense can exhibit considerable plasticity and be recruited to process information from the senses that remain intact. Here, we explored whether the auditory cortex of congenitally deaf individuals represents visual field location of a stimulus-a dimension that is represented in early visual areas. We used functional MRI to measure neural activity in auditory and visual cortices of congenitally deaf and hearing humans while they observed stimuli typically used for mapping visual field preferences in visual cortex. We found that the location of a visual stimulus can be successfully decoded from the patterns of neural activity in auditory cortex of congenitally deaf but not hearing individuals. This is particularly true for locations within the horizontal plane and within peripheral vision. These data show that the representations stored within neuroplastically changed auditory cortex can align with dimensions that are typically represented in visual cortex.

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          Most cited references30

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          Distributed and overlapping representations of faces and objects in ventral temporal cortex.

          The functional architecture of the object vision pathway in the human brain was investigated using functional magnetic resonance imaging to measure patterns of response in ventral temporal cortex while subjects viewed faces, cats, five categories of man-made objects, and nonsense pictures. A distinct pattern of response was found for each stimulus category. The distinctiveness of the response to a given category was not due simply to the regions that responded maximally to that category, because the category being viewed also could be identified on the basis of the pattern of response when those regions were excluded from the analysis. Patterns of response that discriminated among all categories were found even within cortical regions that responded maximally to only one category. These results indicate that the representations of faces and objects in ventral temporal cortex are widely distributed and overlapping.
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            Information-based functional brain mapping.

            The development of high-resolution neuroimaging and multielectrode electrophysiological recording provides neuroscientists with huge amounts of multivariate data. The complexity of the data creates a need for statistical summary, but the local averaging standardly applied to this end may obscure the effects of greatest neuroscientific interest. In neuroimaging, for example, brain mapping analysis has focused on the discovery of activation, i.e., of extended brain regions whose average activity changes across experimental conditions. Here we propose to ask a more general question of the data: Where in the brain does the activity pattern contain information about the experimental condition? To address this question, we propose scanning the imaged volume with a "searchlight," whose contents are analyzed multivariately at each location in the brain.
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              Is neocortex essentially multisensory?

              Although sensory perception and neurobiology are traditionally investigated one modality at a time, real world behaviour and perception are driven by the integration of information from multiple sensory sources. Mounting evidence suggests that the neural underpinnings of multisensory integration extend into early sensory processing. This article examines the notion that neocortical operations are essentially multisensory. We first review what is known about multisensory processing in higher-order association cortices and then discuss recent anatomical and physiological findings in presumptive unimodal sensory areas. The pervasiveness of multisensory influences on all levels of cortical processing compels us to reconsider thinking about neural processing in unisensory terms. Indeed, the multisensory nature of most, possibly all, of the neocortex forces us to abandon the notion that the senses ever operate independently during real-world cognition.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Psychological Science
                Psychol Sci
                SAGE Publications
                0956-7976
                1467-9280
                September 25 2015
                November 2015
                September 30 2015
                November 2015
                : 26
                : 11
                : 1771-1782
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, University of Coimbra
                [2 ]Proaction Laboratory, Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, University of Coimbra
                [3 ]Department of Psychology, Peking University
                [4 ]Key Laboratory of Machine Perception (Ministry of Education), Peking University
                [5 ]State Key Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience and Learning, Beijing Normal University
                [6 ]IDG/McGovern Institute for Brain Research, Beijing Normal University
                [7 ]Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, University of Rochester
                [8 ]Department of Neurosurgery, University of Rochester
                [9 ]Center for Visual Science, University of Rochester
                [10 ]School of Psychology, University of Minho
                [11 ]Neuropsychophysiology Laboratory, Research Center in Psychology, School of Psychology, University of Minho
                [12 ]Bouvé College of Health Sciences, Northeastern University
                [13 ]Peking-Tsinghua Center for Life Sciences, Peking University
                [14 ]PKU-IDG/McGovern Institute for Brain Research, Peking University
                Article
                10.1177/0956797615598970
                5209787
                26423461
                0a535446-6fe8-457a-9641-3c5f78999939
                © 2015

                http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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