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Naturalistic audio-movies reveal common spatial organization across “visual” cortices of different blind individuals

Elizabeth Musz, Rita Loiotile, Janice Chen, Marina Bedny
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.04.01.438106
Elizabeth Musz
Johns Hopkins University, Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, 3400 N Charles Street, Baltimore MD, 21210
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  • For correspondence: emusz1@jhu.edu
Rita Loiotile
Johns Hopkins University, Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, 3400 N Charles Street, Baltimore MD, 21210
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Janice Chen
Johns Hopkins University, Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, 3400 N Charles Street, Baltimore MD, 21210
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Marina Bedny
Johns Hopkins University, Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, 3400 N Charles Street, Baltimore MD, 21210
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Abstract

Occipital cortices of different sighted people contain analogous maps of visual information (e.g., foveal vs. peripheral space). In congenital blindness, “visual” cortices enhance responses to nonvisual stimuli. Do deafferented visual cortices of different blind people represent common informational maps? We leverage a naturalistic stimulus paradigm and inter-subject pattern similarity analysis to address this question. Blindfolded sighted (S, n=22) and congenitally blind (CB, n=22) participants listened to three auditory excerpts from movies; a naturalistic spoken narrative; and matched degraded auditory stimuli (i.e., shuffled sentences and backwards speech) while undergoing fMRI scanning. In a parcel-based whole brain analysis, we measured the spatial activity patterns evoked by each unique, ten-second segment of each auditory clip. We then compared each subject’s spatial pattern to that of all other subjects in the same group (CB or S) within and across segments. In both blind and sighted groups, segments of meaningful auditory stimuli produced distinctive patterns of activity that were shared across individuals. Crucially, only in the CB group, this segment-specific, cross-subject pattern similarity effect emerged in visual cortex, but only for meaningful naturalistic stimuli and not backwards speech. These results suggest that spatial activity patterns within deafferented visual cortices encode meaningful, segment-level information contained in naturalistic auditory stimuli, and that these representations are spatially organized in a similar fashion across blind individuals.

Significance Statement Recent neuroimaging studies show that the so-called “visual” cortices activate during non-visual tasks in people who are born blind. Do the visual cortices of people who are born blind develop similar representational maps? While congenitally blind individuals listened to naturalistic auditory stimuli (i.e., sound clips from movies), distinct timepoints within each stimulus elicited unique spatial activity patterns in visual cortex, and these patterns were shared across different people. These findings suggest that in blindness, the visual cortices encode meaningful information embedded in naturalistic auditory signals in a spatially distributed manner, and that a common representational map can emerge in visual cortex independent of visual experience.

Competing Interest Statement

The authors have declared no competing interest.

Footnotes

  • Conflict of interest statement: The authors declare no competing financial interests

Copyright 
The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license.
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Posted April 01, 2021.
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Naturalistic audio-movies reveal common spatial organization across “visual” cortices of different blind individuals
Elizabeth Musz, Rita Loiotile, Janice Chen, Marina Bedny
bioRxiv 2021.04.01.438106; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.04.01.438106
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Naturalistic audio-movies reveal common spatial organization across “visual” cortices of different blind individuals
Elizabeth Musz, Rita Loiotile, Janice Chen, Marina Bedny
bioRxiv 2021.04.01.438106; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.04.01.438106

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