TopicNeuroscience

congenitally deaf

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2Total items
1Seminar
1ePoster

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SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

What is the function of auditory cortex when it develops in the absence of acoustic input?

Steve Lomber
McGill University
Oct 14, 2021

Cortical plasticity is the neural mechanism by which the cerebrum adapts itself to its environment, while at the same time making it vulnerable to impoverished sensory or developmental experiences. Like the visual system, auditory development passes through a series of sensitive periods in which circuits and connections are established and then refined by experience. Current research is expanding our understanding of cerebral processing and organization in the deaf. In the congenitally deaf, higher-order areas of "deaf" auditory cortex demonstrate significant crossmodal plasticity with neurons responding to visual and somatosensory stimuli. This crucial cerebral function results in compensatory plasticity. Not only can the remaining inputs reorganize to substitute for those lost, but this additional circuitry also confers enhanced abilities to the remaining systems. In this presentation we will review our present understanding of the structure and function of “deaf” auditory cortex using psychophysical, electrophysiological, and connectional anatomy approaches and consider how this knowledge informs our expectations of the capabilities of cochlear implants in the developing brain.

ePosterNeuroscience

REDUCED DYNAMIC RANGE TO COCHLEAR IMPLANT STIMULATION IN THE DORSAL ZONE OF CONGENITALLY DEAF CATS

Nova Resfita, Rüdiger Land, Andrej Kral

FENS Forum 2026

congenitally deaf coverage

2 items

Seminar1
ePoster1

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