Tactile short-term memory in sensory-deprived individuals

To verify whether loosing a sense or two has consequences on a spared sensory modality, namely touch, and whether these consequences depend on practice or are biologically determined, we investigated 13 deafblind participants, 16 deaf participants, 15 blind participants, and 13 matched normally sigh...

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Veröffentlicht in:Experimental brain research 2017-02, Vol.235 (2), p.471-480
Hauptverfasser: Papagno, Costanza, Minniti, Giovanna, Mattavelli, Giulia C., Mantovan, Lara, Cecchetto, Carlo
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container_issue 2
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container_title Experimental brain research
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creator Papagno, Costanza
Minniti, Giovanna
Mattavelli, Giulia C.
Mantovan, Lara
Cecchetto, Carlo
description To verify whether loosing a sense or two has consequences on a spared sensory modality, namely touch, and whether these consequences depend on practice or are biologically determined, we investigated 13 deafblind participants, 16 deaf participants, 15 blind participants, and 13 matched normally sighted and hearing controls on a tactile short-term memory task, using checkerboard matrices of increasing length in which half of the squares were made up of a rough texture and half of a smooth one. Time of execution of a fixed matrix, number of correctly reproduced matrices, largest matrix correctly reproduced and tactile span were recorded. The three groups of sensory-deprived individuals did not differ in any measure, while blind and deaf participants outscored controls in all parameters except time of execution; the difference approached significance for deafblind people compared to controls only in one measure, namely correctly reproduced matrices. In blind and deafblind participants, performance negatively correlated with age of Braille acquisition, the older being the subject when acquiring Braille, the lower the performance, suggesting that practice plays a role. However, the fact that deaf participants, who did not share tactile experience, performed similarly to blind participants and significantly better than controls highlights that practice cannot be the only contribution to better tactile memory.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s00221-016-4808-0
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subjects Accuracy
Adult
Aged
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Biomedicine
Blindness - physiopathology
Braille
Cognitive science
Deafness
Deafness - physiopathology
Disabled persons
Female
Humans
Linguistics
Male
Memory
Memory, Short-Term - physiology
Middle Aged
Neurology
Neuroscience
Neurosciences
Research Article
Time Factors
Touch - physiology
Young Adult
title Tactile short-term memory in sensory-deprived individuals
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