Cross-modal exposure restores multisensory enhancement after hemianopia

Author:

Bean Naomi L1ORCID,Stein Barry E1,Rowland Benjamin A1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Wake Forest School of Medicine Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy, , Medical Center Blvd, Winston-Salem, NC 27157 , United States

Abstract

Abstract Hemianopia is a common consequence of unilateral damage to visual cortex that manifests as a profound blindness in contralesional space. A noninvasive cross-modal (visual–auditory) exposure paradigm has been developed in an animal model to ameliorate this disorder. Repeated stimulation of a visual–auditory stimulus restores overt responses to visual stimuli in the blinded hemifield. It is believed to accomplish this by enhancing the visual sensitivity of circuits remaining after a lesion of visual cortex; in particular, circuits involving the multisensory neurons of the superior colliculus. Neurons in this midbrain structure are known to integrate spatiotemporally congruent visual and auditory signals to amplify their responses, which, in turn, enhances behavioral performance. Here we evaluated the relationship between the rehabilitation of hemianopia and this process of multisensory integration. Induction of hemianopia also eliminated multisensory enhancement in the blinded hemifield. Both vision and multisensory enhancement rapidly recovered with the rehabilitative cross-modal exposures. However, although both reached pre-lesion levels at similar rates, they did so with different spatial patterns. The results suggest that the capability for multisensory integration and enhancement is not a pre-requisite for visual recovery in hemianopia, and that the underlying mechanisms for recovery may be more complex than currently appreciated.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Tab Williams Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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